Mediterranean low-pressure systems or cyclones are responsible for many extreme events affecting the region. This study presents a comprehensive analysis of Mediterranean cyclones from 1940 to 2024 using high-resolution ERA5 reanalysis data. This study implements a detection algorithm based on geopotential height minima on three different pressure levels (1000 hPa, 850 hPa and 700 hPa). Cyclone tracks in this study are constructed by linking identified low-pressure centers at successive time steps using a nearest neighbor tracking algorithm. The number of cyclones at 1000 hPa is filtered by matching them with upper levels and restricting them within 150 km from the coast, covering the entire Mediterranean region, which we divided into three subregions: the western Mediterranean, the eastern Mediterranean, and the Black Sea. Seasonal analysis was performed for winter (December–February), spring (March–May), summer (June–August), and autumn (September–November). Our results have recorded 39,933 individual cyclone tracks, where the majority (25,265 cyclones; 63.3%) are short-lived (24–72 h). Regionally, the western Mediterranean has the highest cyclone density, followed by the Black Sea and the eastern Mediterranean. While there is only a small increase in total numbers, a notable increase in cyclone activity is observed during the summer months, particularly in August, with a statistically significant rise of 18.4% since 1980 across the whole Mediterranean region. In the western Mediterranean, this August intensification was even 23.8%. As a result of this, the annual peak of cyclone activity has shifted from May/June to August.
Khan et al. (Mon,) studied this question.