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IOP Publishing, Environmental Research Letters, 3(6), p. 034033, 2011

DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/6/3/034033

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Precipitation trends over the Korean Peninsula: typhoon-induced changes and a typology for characterizing climate-related risk

Journal article published in 2011 by Jong-Suk Kim, Shaleen Jain
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

Typhoons originating in the west Pacific are major contributors to climate-related risk over the Korean peninsula. The current perspective regarding improved characterization of climatic risk and the projected increases in the intensity, frequency, duration, and power dissipation of typhoons during the 21st century in the western North Pacific region motivated a reappraisal of historical trends in precipitation. In this study, trends in the magnitude and frequency of seasonal precipitation in the five major river basins in Korea are analyzed on the basis of a separation analysis, with recognition of moisture sources (typhoon and non-typhoon). Over the 1966–2007 period, typhoons accounted for 21–26% of seasonal precipitation, with the largest values in the Nakdong River Basin. Typhoon-related precipitation events have increased significantly over portions of Han, Nakdong, and Geum River Basins. Alongside broad patterns toward increases in the magnitude and frequency of precipitation, distinct patterns of trends in the upper and lower quartiles (corresponding to changes in extreme events) are evident. A trend typology—spatially resolved characterization of the combination of shifts in the upper and lower tails of the precipitation distribution—shows that a number of sub-basins have undergone significant changes in one or both of the tails of the precipitation distribution. This broader characterization of trends illuminates the relative role of causal climatic factors and an identification of 'hot spots' likely to experience high exposure to typhoon-related climatic extremes in the future.