Detection of climate change signals using precipitation and temperature time series by a hybrid deep learning framework

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Publication Details

Author listWaqas, M., Humphries, U.W., Wangwongchai, A.

PublisherSpringer

Publication year2025

JournalEnvironmental Monitoring and Assessment (0167-6369)

Volume number197

Start page1

End page32

Number of pages32

ISSN0167-6369

eISSN1573-2959

URLhttps://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10661-025-14712-0

LanguagesEnglish-Great Britain (EN-GB)


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Abstract

Climate change is one of the most extreme challenges of the twenty-first century. Precipitation (pr) and temperature variability are key indicators of climate change detection. Whereas hybrid deep learning (DL) models have been widely applied, their integration with region-specific datasets remains limited. This study uses a CNN-BiLSTM-TCN-attention model to identify the signals of climate change in Thailand based on the 1993–2024 station measurements and CMIP6-GCM simulations. Historical temperature analysis revealed statistically significant warming trends: coastal stations experienced Tasmin increases of up to 0.0673 °C/year and Tasmax of up to 0.0838 °C/year, urban areas 0.0401–0.0733 °C/year, and high-altitude sites 0.02–0.03 °C/year. Precipitation trends were spatially heterogeneous, with increases at Khlong Yai (4.764 mm/year) and Samut Prakan (4.303 mm/year), but declines at Aranyaprathet (− 0.688 mm/year) and Kampaeng Phet (− 0.402 mm/year). After bias correction, the framework achieved high performance (R2 = 0.9807 for Tasmin, 0.9782 for Tasmax, 0.9034 for precipitation) and low error metrics (MSE = 0.0461). Future projections under SSP3-7.0 and SSP5-8.5 indicate widespread emergence of temperature signals, with median detection around 2019 and warming rates of + 0.5 °C/decade; by 2100, Tasmin and Tasmax are projected to rise robustly (+ 0.50 to + 0.72 °C/decade), while precipitation anomalies remain weakly negative (− 0.03 to − 0.08%/decade) with high variability but non-emergent trends. This study’s findings show the importance of applying Thailand-specific observational and model data to effectively detect and quantify local climate change signals, which can be used to inform local adaptation planning.


Keywords

Climate change detectionDeep learningPrecipitation variabilityTemperature trendsThailand


Last updated on 2025-22-10 at 12:00