TY - JOUR
T1 - Redefining southern Australia's climatic regions and seasons
AU - Fiddes, Sonya
AU - Pepler, Acacia
AU - Saunders, Kate
AU - Hope, Pandora
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors would like to acknowledge Jennifer Catto, Andrew Dowdy and Irina Rudeva for their contributions to the weather types dataset. Sonya Fiddes, Acacia Pepler and Pandora Hope were supported by the Victorian Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning as part of the Victorian Water and Climate Initiative. This research was undertaken with the assistance of resources and services from the National Computational Infrastructure (project eg3), which is supported by the Australian Government. The authors would like to acknowledge the traditional owners of the lands upon which this research was performed and pay our respect to elders past, present and emerging.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Journal Compilation
PY - 2021/3
Y1 - 2021/3
N2 - Climate scientists routinely rely on averaging over time or space to simplify complex information and to concisely communicate findings. Currently, no consistent definitions of 'warm' or 'cool' seasons for southern Australia exist, making comparisons across studies difficult. Similarly, numerous climate studies in Australia use either arbitrarily defined areas or the Natural Resource Management (NRM) clusters to perform spatial averaging. While the NRM regions were informed by temperature and rainfall information, they remain somewhat arbitrary. Here we use weather type influence on rainfall and clustering methods to quantitatively define climatic regions and seasons over southern Australia. Three methods are explored: k-means clustering and two agglomerative clustering methods, Ward linkage and average linkage. K-means was found to be preferred in temporal clustering, while the average linkage method was preferred for spatial clustering. For southern Australia as a whole, we define the cool season as April-September and warm season as October-March, though we note that a three-season split may provide more nuanced climate analysis. We also show that different regions across southern Australia experience different seasons and demonstrate the changing spatial influence of weather types with the seasons, which may aid regionally or seasonally specific climate analysis. Division of southern Australia into 15 climatic regions shows localised agreement with the NRM clusters where distinct differences in rainfall amounts exist. However, the climate regions defined here better represent the importance of topographical aspect on weather type influence and the inland extent of particular weather types. We suggest that the use of these regions would provide consistent climate analysis across studies if widely adopted. A key requirement for climate scientists is the simplification of data sets into both seasonally or regionally averaged subsets. This simplification, by grouping like regions or seasons, is done for a number of reasons both scientific and practical, including to help understand patterns of variability, underlying drivers and trends in climate and weather, to communicate large amounts of data concisely, to reduce the amount of data required for processing (which becomes increasingly important with higher resolution climate model output), or to more simply draw a physical boundary between regions for other purposes, such as flora and fauna habitat analysis, appropriate agricultural practices or water management.
AB - Climate scientists routinely rely on averaging over time or space to simplify complex information and to concisely communicate findings. Currently, no consistent definitions of 'warm' or 'cool' seasons for southern Australia exist, making comparisons across studies difficult. Similarly, numerous climate studies in Australia use either arbitrarily defined areas or the Natural Resource Management (NRM) clusters to perform spatial averaging. While the NRM regions were informed by temperature and rainfall information, they remain somewhat arbitrary. Here we use weather type influence on rainfall and clustering methods to quantitatively define climatic regions and seasons over southern Australia. Three methods are explored: k-means clustering and two agglomerative clustering methods, Ward linkage and average linkage. K-means was found to be preferred in temporal clustering, while the average linkage method was preferred for spatial clustering. For southern Australia as a whole, we define the cool season as April-September and warm season as October-March, though we note that a three-season split may provide more nuanced climate analysis. We also show that different regions across southern Australia experience different seasons and demonstrate the changing spatial influence of weather types with the seasons, which may aid regionally or seasonally specific climate analysis. Division of southern Australia into 15 climatic regions shows localised agreement with the NRM clusters where distinct differences in rainfall amounts exist. However, the climate regions defined here better represent the importance of topographical aspect on weather type influence and the inland extent of particular weather types. We suggest that the use of these regions would provide consistent climate analysis across studies if widely adopted. A key requirement for climate scientists is the simplification of data sets into both seasonally or regionally averaged subsets. This simplification, by grouping like regions or seasons, is done for a number of reasons both scientific and practical, including to help understand patterns of variability, underlying drivers and trends in climate and weather, to communicate large amounts of data concisely, to reduce the amount of data required for processing (which becomes increasingly important with higher resolution climate model output), or to more simply draw a physical boundary between regions for other purposes, such as flora and fauna habitat analysis, appropriate agricultural practices or water management.
KW - climate regions
KW - k-means clustering
KW - Natural Resource Management (NRM)
KW - rainfall
KW - regions
KW - seasons
KW - Southern Australia
KW - topography
KW - weather type
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85103584279&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1071/ES20003
DO - 10.1071/ES20003
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85103584279
SN - 2206-5865
VL - 71
SP - 92
EP - 109
JO - Journal of Southern Hemisphere Earth Systems Science
JF - Journal of Southern Hemisphere Earth Systems Science
IS - 1
ER -