首页> 外文期刊>The Science of the Total Environment >Global drivers of minimum mortality temperatures in cities
【24h】

Global drivers of minimum mortality temperatures in cities

机译:全球最低死亡率温度的驱动因素

获取原文
获取原文并翻译 | 示例
           

摘要

Human mortality shows a pronounced temperature dependence. The minimum mortality temperature (MMT) as a characteristic point of the temperature-mortality relationship is influenced by many factors. As MMT estimates are based on case studies, they are sporadic, limited to data-rich regions, and their drivers have not yet been clearly identified across case studies. This impedes the elaboration of spatially comprehensive impact studies on heat-related mortality and hampers the temporal transfer required to assess climate change impacts. Using 400 MMTs from cities, we systematically establish a generalised model that is able to estimate MMTs (in daily apparent temperature) for cities, based on a set of climatic, topographic and socio-economic drivers. A sigmoid model prevailed against alternative model setups due to having the lowest Akaike Information Criterion (AICc) and the smallest RMSE. We find the long-term climate, the elevation, and the socio-economy to be relevant drivers of our MMT sample within the non-linear parametric regression model. A first model application estimated MMTs for 599 European cities ( >100 000 inhabitants) and reveals a pronounced decrease in MMTs (27.8-16 degrees C) from southern to northern cities. Disruptions of this pattern across regions of similar mean temperatures can be explained by socio-economic standards as noted for central eastern Europe. Our alternative method allows to approximate MMTs independently from the availability of daily mortality records. For the first time, a quantification of climatic and non-climatic MMT drivers has been achieved, which allows to consider changes in socio-economic conditions and climate. This work contributes to the comparability among MMTs beyond location-specific and regional limits and, hence, towards a spatially comprehensive impact assessment for heat-related mortality. (C) 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
机译:人类死亡率显示出明显的温度依赖性。作为温度-死亡率关系的特征点的最低死亡率温度(MMT)受许多因素影响。由于MMT估算是基于案例研究的,因此它们是零星的,仅限于数据丰富的区域,并且尚未在案例研究中清楚地确定其驱动因素。这阻碍了对与热有关的死亡率的空间综合影响研究的拟订,并阻碍了评估气候变化影响所需的时间转移。我们使用来自城市的400个MMT,系统地建立了一个通用模型,该模型能够基于一组气候,地形和社会经济驱动因素来估算城市的MMT(以每日表观温度为准)。由于具有最低的Akaike信息准则(AICc)和最小的RMSE,因此S型模型优于其他模型设置。我们发现长期气候,海拔和社会经济状况是非线性参数回归模型中MMT样本的相关驱动因素。第一个模型应用程序估计了599个欧洲城市(> 100000居民)的MMT,并显示从南部城市到北部城市的MMT(27.8-16摄氏度)显着下降。这种模式在平均温度相似的地区之间的破坏可以通过东欧中部地区的社会经济标准来解释。我们的替代方法允许独立于每日死亡率记录的可用性来估计MMT。首次实现了对气候和非气候MMT驱动因素的量化,从而可以考虑社会经济条件和气候的变化。这项工作有助于MMT之间超越特定地点和区域限制的可比性,因此有助于对与热有关的死亡率进行空间综合影响评估。 (C)2019 Elsevier B.V.保留所有权利。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号