the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
Revisiting the Historical Drying of the Mediterranean in the LESFMIP Simulations
Abstract. Simulations from the Large Ensemble Single Forcing Model Intercomparison Project are used to isolate the impact of greenhouse gases (GHGs) and anthropogenic aerosols for historical (1850–2014) wintertime drying in the Mediterranean region, and to clarify the importance of different dynamical mechanisms for the intermodel spread. Increasing GHGs have already led to a clear ridging signal across the Mediterranean and a precipitation reduction of up to 15 %. Anthropogenic aerosols, on the other hand, led to Mediterranean troughing in most models. There is pronounced intermodel and intramodel spread in both the sea level pressure and precipitation responses however, and the relation between this spread and the spread in 9 different climatic metrics is explored to help clarify dynamical mechanisms. A stronger tendency towards Mediterranean ridging is found in models and ensemble members with a more pronounced North Atlantic warming hole, a stronger stratospheric polar vortex, and to a lesser degree with a larger poleward shift of the eddy-driven jet. While these three sensitivities are as expected, others are not. Namely, a larger increase of global mean temperature is associated with troughing over the Mediterranean, opposite to naive expectations. Moreover, the single-forcing experiments indicate that a warmer land relative to the ocean (over the Mediterranean) is associated with troughing, rather than the previously proposed ridging. Other sensitivities are weak: the spread in the historical response cannot be explained by spread in shifts of the Hadley cell edge or the zonal-mean subtropical jet. Many of these sensitivities differ, however, when considering each model’s large ensemble as compared to treating all available members as a single large ensemble. This result highlights the importance of multi-model ensembles over single-model ensembles in revealing relations between dynamical and climate sensitivities. Overall, the results of this work highlight that aerosols had a detectable influence on Mediterranean climate in the historical climate, implying that removal of these aerosols will have an impact in future decades.
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Status: final response (author comments only)
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RC1: 'Comment on egusphere-2025-4287', Anonymous Referee #1, 27 Oct 2025
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AC1: 'Reply on RC1', David Avisar, 01 Jan 2026
The comment was uploaded in the form of a supplement: https://egusphere.copernicus.org/preprints/2025/egusphere-2025-4287/egusphere-2025-4287-AC1-supplement.pdf
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AC1: 'Reply on RC1', David Avisar, 01 Jan 2026
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RC2: 'Comment on egusphere-2025-4287', Osamu Miyawaki, 05 Dec 2025
This manuscript investigates the sources of inter- and intramodel spread in historical Mediterranean precipitation trends using LESFMIP simulations. The key analysis involves taking correlations of wintertime precipitation trends with those of various atmospheric dynamics metrics under greenhouse gas and aerosol forcings across all LESFMIP ensemble runs.
Understanding inter- and intramodel spread is important and I think this manuscript presents valuable results on what dynamics matter for understanding the sources of Mediterranean precipitation spread. However, I share the same concerns raised by reviewer 1, especially regarding how the current manuscript doesn't fully leverage the usefulness of LESFMIP simulations. It seems to me that separating the role of various forcings on the precipitation trend is not the main focus of this paper. There are brief discussions in passing about how the correlations between precipitation trend and various dynamics metrics differ among GHG and aerosol forcings but many of the differences remain unexplained. Thus the key results found here (sources of inter- and intramodel spread) could largely be done using regular SMILE ensembles (see e.g., Deser et al. 2020, Maher et al. 2023), which offers the advantage of having even more ensemble members than in LESFMIP.
As reviewer 1 points out, I agree the usefulness of the LESFMIP ensemble could be better leveraged by putting the model trends in the context of observations. Vicente-Serrano et al. (2025) argue observed Mediterranean precipitation trends are dominated by internal variability and are not a response to forcing. LESFMIP could provide more clarity behind the sensitivity of the trend to the choice of time period (e.g., opposing responses to GHG and aerosol forcing may lead to weaker total forced response during some time periods).
As a first step I suggest the authors either 1) align the choice of dataset with the current focus on understanding inter- and intramodel spread or 2) reframe their research question to better align with the usefulness of the LESFMIP dataset.
Deser, C., Lehner, F., Rodgers, K.B. et al. Insights from Earth system model initial-condition large ensembles and future prospects. Nat. Clim. Chang. 10, 277–286 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41558-020-0731-2
Maher, N., Wills, R. C. J., DiNezio, P., Klavans, J., Milinski, S., Sanchez, S. C., Stevenson, S., Stuecker, M. F., and Wu, X.: The future of the El Niño–Southern Oscillation: using large ensembles to illuminate time-varying responses and inter-model differences, Earth Syst. Dynam., 14, 413–431, https://doi.org/10.5194/esd-14-413-2023, 2023.
Vicente-Serrano, Sergio M., et al. "High temporal variability not trend dominates Mediterranean precipitation." Nature 639.8055 (2025): 658-666.
Citation: https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-2025-4287-RC2 -
AC2: 'Reply on RC2', David Avisar, 01 Jan 2026
The comment was uploaded in the form of a supplement: https://egusphere.copernicus.org/preprints/2025/egusphere-2025-4287/egusphere-2025-4287-AC2-supplement.pdf
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AC2: 'Reply on RC2', David Avisar, 01 Jan 2026
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Publisher’s note: a supplement was added to this comment on 3 November 2025.
Please see attached pdf.