1981-2010Max temperature of warmest month — 1981-2010 (CHELSA)

Max temperature of warmest month — 1981-2010 (CHELSA)

This layer maps the maximum temperature of the warmest month for the recent reference period 1981–2010.

Category: Physical risks · Mitigating services · Climate Chronic Risks · 1981-2010 Coverage: Global Format: Raster grid (~2 km) Used in risk analysis: No (contextual layer; not used in materiality scoring)

What it shows

This layer maps the maximum temperature of the warmest month for the recent reference period 1981–2010. It describes the typical seasonal heat peak a location experiences, which matters for nature-related risk because it constrains which species and ecosystems can persist there and indicates baseline heat stress on habitats, agriculture and water resources.

How it is built

The layer is taken from the CHELSA-CMIP6 v2.1 bioclimatic dataset (Karger et al.). CHELSA produces high-resolution global climate surfaces by statistically downscaling climate data with corrections for terrain and atmospheric processes, giving a finer and more realistic picture of mountain and coastal climates than coarse global models. This particular surface is the 1981–2010 reference climatology — an observed-period baseline against which future projections can be compared — provided globally at roughly 2 km grid spacing.

How to read it

Higher values indicate hotter peak-month temperatures; lower values indicate cooler maxima. The layer is a baseline climatology, so it is most useful as the reference point for comparison with the matching SSP3-7.0 2071–2100 projection, where the difference between the two reveals the magnitude of projected warming at a location.

Source

CHELSA-CMIP6 v2.1 bioclimatic layer (Karger et al.), maximum temperature of the warmest month, 1981–2010 reference climatology. Open licence.

Comparison with the WWF Risk Filter Suite

This bioclimatic baseline has no separate equivalent in the WWF Risk Filter Suite. CHELSA climate layers describe underlying climatic conditions rather than a packaged WWF risk indicator; WWF does not publish bioclimatic temperature surfaces as distinct dimensions. It should be treated as a Darwin climate-context extension that underpins, rather than maps onto, a specific WWF indicator.

Legend

Symbolised field: Max temperature of warmest month

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Generated from darwin/layers/layer-chelsa-tasmax_warmestmonth-historical.toml and risk_indicator_pairs.toml (develop).