On the other hand, the subtropical waters can be expected to become saltier in the future, for the same reason (increased hydrological cycle
gives more evaporation in the subtropics, thus increased salinities in subtropical waters).
Not exact matches
Given such low penetrance, this CO2 radiation will be much
more effected by mist, spray and foam, and should
more directly impact
evaporation than radiation which penetrates 10s of meters.
(I think that an anomalously warm ocean surface heated from below would lead to
more evaporation, and the additional water vapor would
give a positive greenhouse effect that would partially offset the effect of a drop in greenhouse gas concentrations.)
But going into spring and summer, soil should dry out
more quickly (and it has been)
given a decreased warm month precipitation and increased rate of
evaporation.
He had already been warned on this thread that when I had earlier answered a legitimate question from a commenter far
more polite and sensible than he, I had replied with a straightforward account of how Professor Lindzen, in a talk that he had
given under my chairmanship at the Houses of Parliament, had calculated that if the increase in
evaporation from the Earth's surface with warming was thrice that which the models predicted then climate sensitivity was one - third of that which the models predicted.