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Featured researches published by M. N. Lorenzo.


Regional Environmental Change | 2013

Influence of climate on grape production and wine quality in the Rías Baixas, north-western Spain

M. N. Lorenzo; Juan Jose Taboada; J. F. Lorenzo; Alexandre M. Ramos

Climate exerts an important role on grape production and wine quality. For one of the main areas protected under the denomination of origin Rías Baixas, in Galicia, Spain, we explore the relationships among grape production, wine quality, rainfall and temperature for the period 1987–2005. The influence of climatic variability was analysed in terms of the relationship between the productivity of the grapevines and the main meteorological teleconnection patterns affecting the North Atlantic region. We also investigate the daily variation in atmospheric circulation through the study of the influence of weather types derived using an automated daily classification. We consider three bioclimatic indices for viticultural zoning, Winkler and Huglin, and the hydrothermic index of Branas, Bernon and Levadoux. While significant trends were identified in the Winkler and Huglin indices, there were no significant trends in the Branas, Bernon and Levadoux index, for the period 1958–2005. For the coming decades, using the scenario A1B evaluated by the regional climate models used in the ENSEMBLES project, the positive trends of Winkler and Huglin indices continue, while Branas, Bernon and Levadoux implies a negative trend. In all cases, these trends induce significant changes in the viticulture of the region.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Changes in Present and Future Circulation Types Frequency in Northwest Iberian Peninsula

M. N. Lorenzo; Alexandre M. Ramos; Juan Jose Taboada; Luis Gimeno

The aim of the work described herein was to study projection scenarios in order to find changes in the synoptic variability of the northwest Iberian Peninsula in the 21st century. To this end, we investigated the changes in the frequency of the different circulation types computed for the study area using three different models used in the IPCC 4th assessment report. The circulation types were computed using the procedure known as Lamb circulation types. The control simulation for the late 20th century was evaluated objectively from the results obtained using data from the NCEP/NCAR reanalysis, as to evaluate the ability of the model to reproduce the present climate. We have compared not only seasonal mean sea level pressure fields but also the mean seasonal frequency of circulation types. The results for the end of the 21st century show a decrease in the frequency of cyclonic, W, and SW circulation types in the spring and summer months. This trend also appears in the autumn, with a concomitant increase in the anticyclonic types.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Seasonal predictability of the East Atlantic pattern from sea surface temperatures.

Isabel Iglesias; M. N. Lorenzo; Juan Jose Taboada

This study analyzes the influence of sea surface temperatures (SSTs) on the second mode of atmospheric variability in the north Atlantic/European sector, namely the East-Atlantic (EA) pattern, for the period 1950–2012. For this purpose, lead-lag relationships between SSTs and the EA pattern, ranging from 0 to 3 seasons, were assessed. As a main result, anomalies of the EA pattern in boreal summer and autumn are significantly related to SST anomalies in the Indo-Pacific Ocean during the preceding seasons. A statistical forecasting scheme based on multiple linear regression was used to hindcast the EA-anomalies with a lead-time of 1 to 2 months. The results of a one-year-out cross-validation approach indicate that the phases of the EA in summer and autumn can be properly hindcast.


Regional Environmental Change | 2016

Present and future climate conditions for winegrowing in Spain

M. N. Lorenzo; Alexandre M. Ramos; Swen Brands

This study deals with the question of how winegrowing in Spain may be altered by anthropogenic climate change. The present state and expected future development of three bioclimatic indices relevant for winegrowing were assessed by observation, and four regional climate models from the EU-ENSEMBLES project were investigated. When comparing the 2061–2090 scenario period to the 1961–1990 reference period, the models unanimously indicate a significant increase in the mean of the two considered thermal indices over the entire study region. However, for the index based on temperature and precipitation, the models are heavily biased when verified against observations and generally disagree on the size of the projected future change. For this index, unanimous model agreement was only found for northwestern Spain where all models indicated a significant decrease in the mean. From these results, regional climate change is expected to negatively affect the quality of wine in the growing regions of central and southern Spain, and the Ebro valley, whereas positive effects should be expected in the northwest. No significant changes in the risk of mildew infestation are to be expected except for the northwest, where this risk is projected to decrease.


Frontiers of Earth Science in China | 2014

A new circulation type classification based upon Lagrangian air trajectories

Alexandre M. Ramos; Michael Sprenger; Heini Wernli; Ana María Durán-Quesada; M. N. Lorenzo; Luis Gimeno

A new classification method of the large-scale circulation characteristic for a specific target area (NW Iberian Peninsula) is presented, based on the analysis of 90-h backward trajectories arriving in this area calculated with the 3-D Lagrangian particle dispersion model FLEXPART. A cluster analysis is applied to separate the backward trajectories in up to five representative air streams for each day. Specific measures are then used to characterise the distinct air streams (e.g., curvature of the trajectories, cyclonic or anticyclonic flow, moisture evolution, origin and length of the trajectories). The robustness of the presented method is demonstrated in comparison with the Eulerian Lamb weather type classification. A case study of the 2003 heatwave is discussed in terms of the new Lagrangian circulation and the Lamb weather type classifications. It is shown that the new classification method adds valuable information about the pertinent meteorological conditions, which are missing in an Eulerian approach. The new method is climatologically evaluated for the five-year time period from December 1999 to November 2004. The ability of the method to capture the inter-seasonal circulation variability in the target region is shown. Furthermore, the multi-dimensional character of the classification is shortly discussed, in particular with respect to inter-seasonal differences. Finally, the relationship between the new Lagrangian classification and the precipitation in the target area is studied.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2008

The role of stochastic forcing on the behavior of thermohaline circulation.

M. N. Lorenzo; J. J. Taboada; Isabel Iglesias; I. Alvarez

The nonlinear nature of the climate system suggests that its reactions to unexpected perturbations could be different from the expected ones. In nonlinear science it is recognized as a promising paradigm that stochastic fluctuations can generate order or other counterintuitive effects. Thus, noise sources, adequately coupled to a nonlinear system, may give rise to a rich new phenomenology not present in a deterministic noiseless scenario. In this review we focus attention on thermohaline circulation (THC). THC presents two modes of operation; one state shows active THC and the other inactive. Previous episodes of transitions between both states of THC observed in paleoclimatic records and the influence of this circulation on climate have resulted in detailed investigations on the dynamics of the THC. A weakening or a collapse of this current could trigger the onset of a new Younger Dryas. In this review the introduction of stochastic forcing in key parameters, both in a simple box model and in an earth model of intermediate complexity, provokes a weakening and even a shutdown of the THC. The consequences of this weakening are observed in different variables. The surface air temperature and the sea surface temperature are dominated by cooling of the Northern Hemisphere. Changes in the position of the Intertropical Convergence Zone and in precipitation are observed. There is also an intensification of the North Atlantic Oscillation values during winter. These results reinforce the necessity to consider stochastic sources in climate models to improve our understanding of the climate.


International Journal of Climatology | 2008

Links between circulation weather types and teleconnection patterns and their influence on precipitation patterns in Galicia (NW Spain)

M. N. Lorenzo; Juan Jose Taboada; Luis Gimeno


Continental Shelf Research | 2011

Comparative analysis of upwelling influence between the western and northern coast of the Iberian Peninsula

I. Alvarez; M. Gómez-Gesteira; M. deCastro; M. N. Lorenzo; A.J.C. Crespo; João Miguel Dias


Climate Research | 2011

The state of climate in NW Iberia

David Barriopedro Cepero; I. Alvarez; M. Gómez–Gesteira; Luis Gimeno; Juan Jose Taboada; M. N. Lorenzo; M.L. De Castro; Raquel Nieto; Alejandro Jacobo Cabrera Crespo; Alexandre M. Ramos; Isabel Iglesias; J. L. Gómez Gesteira; Fátima Espírito Santo; Isabel F. Trigo


Climate Research | 2008

Influence of atmospheric modes on coastal upwelling along the western coast of the Iberian Peninsula, 1985 to 2005

M. deCastro; M. Gómez-Gesteira; M. N. Lorenzo; I. Alvarez; Alejandro Jacobo Cabrera Crespo

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