Abstract:
Even though temperature variation in Sri Lanka is in narrow range, being an island it is vulnerable to the changes happen in the global climate. In this paper, long-term trends in averages and extremes of Sri Lankan temperature were studied. The temperature data analysed consists 55-years of daily raw maximum and minimum temperature records from 20-stations scattered throughout the island. The non-parametric Mann-Kendall and Sen-Theil methods were used for the investigation. The pre-whitening method were used to remove autocorrelation from the time series. To test the data with seasons, modified seasonal Mann-Kendall trend test was applied. Results show a general increase in the maximum (Tmax) and average temperature (Tave) for most of the stations island-wide and few stations were observed for the increasing trend in Tmin. The Tave was significantly increased for majority of the stations in Sri Lanka during most the months. Especially most evident for the month of July during which maximum stations observed for the increase in Tave. Although it is difficult to reason out for such increase, deforestation in the recent decades may be responsible together with the global climate change for the overall increase in the temperature of Sri Lanka. A regional trend attribution study is suggested as a window for the future research.