Scientific Reports (May 2022)

Projected U.S. drought extremes through the twenty-first century with vapor pressure deficit

  • Brandi L. Gamelin,
  • Jeremy Feinstein,
  • Jiali Wang,
  • Julie Bessac,
  • Eugene Yan,
  • Veerabhadra R. Kotamarthi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-12516-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 15

Abstract

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Abstract Global warming is expected to enhance drought extremes in the United States throughout the twenty-first century. Projecting these changes can be complex in regions with large variability in atmospheric and soil moisture on small spatial scales. Vapor Pressure Deficit (VPD) is a valuable measure of evaporative demand as moisture moves from the surface into the atmosphere and a dynamic measure of drought. Here, VPD is used to identify short-term drought with the Standardized VPD Drought Index (SVDI); and used to characterize future extreme droughts using grid dependent stationary and non-stationary generalized extreme value (GEV) models, and a random sampling technique is developed to quantify multimodel uncertainties. The GEV analysis was performed with projections using the Weather Research and Forecasting model, downscaled from three Global Climate Models based on the Representative Concentration Pathway 8.5 for present, mid-century and late-century. Results show the VPD based index (SVDI) accurately identifies the timing and magnitude short-term droughts, and extreme VPD is increasing across the United States and by the end of the twenty-first century. The number of days VPD is above 9 kPa increases by 10 days along California’s coastline, 30–40 days in the northwest and Midwest, and 100 days in California’s Central Valley.