Non-Negligible Urbanization Effects on Trend Estimates of Total and Extreme Precipitation in Northwest China
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Data Sources and Precipitation Indices
- The daily precipitation data were obtained from the China Homogenized Daily Precipitation Dataset developed by the China Meteorological Administration (CMA). The dataset was homogenized using the RHtest v4 software [17], with the correction procedures following Cao et al. [18]. This dataset was primarily used to calculate precipitation indices. A total of 364 meteorological stations located in NWC were selected (as shown in Figure 1). Preliminary analysis revealed that these stations exhibited substantial missing data during 1951–1960. To ensure temporal consistency and observational reliability, the study period was therefore constrained to 1961–2022.
- The LULC dataset was sourced from the European Space Agency (ESA) Climate Change Initiative (CCI) Land Cover project (https://climate.esa.int/en/projects/land-cover/data/, accessed on 20 April 2023). Developed within the ESA CCI framework, this satellite-derived global product [19] provides continuous land surface characterization at a 300 m spatial resolution. The analysis utilized the 2020 LULC product, which encompasses 38 distinct LULC classes. Detailed class definitions include anthropogenic surface types (urban areas, croplands), vegetated domains (tree-covered, grassland), and natural features (bare soil, water bodies), etc. [19].
2.2. Selection of Rural Reference Stations
2.3. Constructing Regional Average Time Series
2.4. Urbanization Effect and Urbanization Contribution
2.5. Trend Estimation Method
3. Results
3.1. Precipitation Changes in NWC
3.2. The Effects of Urbanization on Precipitation
3.2.1. Relative Threshold Indices
3.2.2. Absolute Threshold Indices
3.2.3. Extreme Value Indices
3.2.4. Other Indices
4. Discussion
- Most of the meteorological observation stations in NWC are in oasis areas, but some are in agricultural oasis and others in urban oasis. Compared to the deserts and Gobi areas, where there are usually no observation stations, oasis areas are characterized by larger actual evaporation and higher atmospheric moisture [30], with more precipitation and extreme intense precipitation. This has been assumed as one of the main causes for the increased precipitation as observed in the arid region of NWC [30].
- In urban oasis areas, however, the increases in actual evaporation and atmospheric moisture may have been smaller as compared to those in agricultural oasis areas, due to the relatively smaller proportion of vegetation or crop plants and the resulting lower consumption of water. The urban heat island (UHI) and urban dry island (UDI) in urban areas further increase the vapor pressure deficit (VPD) near urban stations, leading to a lower possibility for water vapor to condense in atmosphere and a lower precipitation frequency and precipitation amounts. As urbanization proceeds, urban stations may have seen relatively decreased precipitation total and extremes compared to the rural stations, which are mostly located in agricultural oasis areas (Figure 8).
- It is also possible that the aerosol competition mechanism in urban areas plays a role. Due to urban traffic and industrial pollution, cloud droplet particles may decrease because of the excessive cloud condensation nuclei in urban areas compared to rural areas. The merging of cloud droplets is suppressed, slowing down the rate of cloud droplet transformation into rain droplets and causing less precipitation [30,31,32,33]. The radiation effect of aerosols can reduce the radiation reaching the ground, thereby reducing the energy used for evaporating surface water bodies and convection, resulting in reduced water evaporation and weakened convection in urban areas. The heat that is not reflected into space by aerosols is absorbed by the upper atmosphere, stabilizing the low-layer atmosphere and suppressing the generation of convective clouds [34,35] (Figure 8).
5. Conclusions
- Precipitation in NWC is increasing. Temporally, the total precipitation (PRCPTOT) has shown an upward trend, alongside increases in the frequency (R10mm, R20mm) and intensity (SDII, Rx1day, Rx5day, R95pTOT, R99pTOT) of extreme precipitation events. In contrast, the duration of consecutive dry days (CDD) has decreased. These trends pose significant challenges for adapting to extreme climate variability. Spatially, precipitation has increased across most of NWC, but the spatial distribution of these increase exhibit pronounced heterogeneity, reflecting regional disparities in hydrological responses to climate change.
- The precipitation in NWC is affected by urbanization, but the urbanization effect varies among different regions and indices. The difference series (all–rural) of the R10mm, R95pTOT, R99pTOT, and PRCPTOT indices across the sampled urban areas of NWC exhibited statistically significant decreasing trends ( 0.05), indicating substantial urbanization impacts on these four extreme precipitation indices. The estimated urbanization contributions were estimated as 43% for R10mm, 44% for R95pTOT, 35% for R99pTOT, and 33% for PRCPTOT, respectively. However, the difference series (all–rural) of the R95pTOT, SDII, CDD, and CWD indices in Urumqi exhibited statistically significant increasing trends ( 0.05), demonstrating a pronounced urbanization effect on these four indices. The urbanization contributions reached 54% for R95pTOT, 46% for SDII, 42% for CDD, and 100% for CWD.
- Previously reported regional increases in total and extreme precipitation may have been underestimated due to the urbanization bias of precipitation data. The R10mm, R95pTOT, R99pTOT, and PRCPTOT indices in the sampled urban areas of NWC exhibited statistically significant negative urbanization effects at urban and all stations. The downward urbanization effects are opposite to the overall upward regional trends in the total precipitation and extreme precipitation indices.
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
| NWC | Northwest China |
| ESA | European Space Agency |
| CCI | Climate Change Initiative |
| GPCC | Global Precipitation Climatology Center |
| CMIP6 | Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 6 |
| ETCCDI | Expert Team on Climate Change Detection and Indices |
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| Indices | All Stations | Rural Stations | of NWC | of NWC | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Rx1day | 0.061 *** | 0.074 *** | −0.015 | — |
| 2 | Rx5day | 0.057 *** | 0.057 ** | −0.005 | — |
| 3 | SDII | 0.083 *** | 0.093 *** | −0.016 | — |
| 4 | R10mm | 0.174 ** | 0.283 *** | −0.075 ** | 43% |
| 5 | R20mm | 0.066 * | 0.101 ** | −0.029 | — |
| 6 | CDD | −3.675 *** | −4.199 *** | 0.567 | — |
| 7 | CWD | −0.016 | −0.019 | 0.009 | — |
| 8 | R95pTOT | 0.086 *** | 0.123 *** | −0.038 ** | 44% |
| 9 | R99pTOT | 0.067 *** | 0.092 *** | −0.024 * | 35% |
| 10 | PRCPTOT | 0.106 *** | 0.137 *** | −0.035 *** | 33% |
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Liu, C.; Zhang, P.; Ren, G.; Du, H.; Yang, G.; Guo, Z. Non-Negligible Urbanization Effects on Trend Estimates of Total and Extreme Precipitation in Northwest China. Land 2025, 14, 2113. https://doi.org/10.3390/land14112113
Liu C, Zhang P, Ren G, Du H, Yang G, Guo Z. Non-Negligible Urbanization Effects on Trend Estimates of Total and Extreme Precipitation in Northwest China. Land. 2025; 14(11):2113. https://doi.org/10.3390/land14112113
Chicago/Turabian StyleLiu, Chunli, Panfeng Zhang, Guoyu Ren, Haibo Du, Guowei Yang, and Ziying Guo. 2025. "Non-Negligible Urbanization Effects on Trend Estimates of Total and Extreme Precipitation in Northwest China" Land 14, no. 11: 2113. https://doi.org/10.3390/land14112113
APA StyleLiu, C., Zhang, P., Ren, G., Du, H., Yang, G., & Guo, Z. (2025). Non-Negligible Urbanization Effects on Trend Estimates of Total and Extreme Precipitation in Northwest China. Land, 14(11), 2113. https://doi.org/10.3390/land14112113

