Large-scale atmospheric circulation and global sea surface temperature associations with Horn of Africa June-September rainfall

This study uses correlation, regression, and composite analyses for the period 1970–1999 to explore the relationships between the June–September rainfall in the Horn of Africa (especially Ethiopian) and large-scale regional atmospheric circulation patterns across Africa and the Atlantic and Indian O...

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Main Authors: Segele, Z., Lamb, P., Leslie, Lance
Format: Journal Article
Published: John Wiley & Sons Ltd. 2009
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/25464
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author Segele, Z.
Lamb, P.
Leslie, Lance
author_facet Segele, Z.
Lamb, P.
Leslie, Lance
author_sort Segele, Z.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description This study uses correlation, regression, and composite analyses for the period 1970–1999 to explore the relationships between the June–September rainfall in the Horn of Africa (especially Ethiopian) and large-scale regional atmospheric circulation patterns across Africa and the Atlantic and Indian Oceans, and global sea surface temperature (SST) anomalies. Abundant rainfall in the Horn of Africa is associated with enhanced westerlies across western and central Africa. These westerlies are produced by a stronger north-east directed mean sea level pressure (MSLP) gradient resulting from MSLP intensification over the Gulf of Guinea and deepening of the monsoon trough across the Arabian Peninsula. This is reflected by a strong correlation (−0.71) between 5-day (pentad) Ethiopian rainfall and the Gulf of Guinea minus the Arabian Peninsula MSLP difference. This correlation decreases to − 0.39 when the seasonal cycles are removed from both time series. A wet Horn of Africa monsoon is also associated with deep moist air extending up to mid-troposphere and large water vapour transport convergence across much of Ethiopia, a strong Somali low-level jet, and a strong tropical easterly jet (TEJ).Although there are large changes in TEJ strength, the position of the jet axis shows little variation between wet and dry events. Associated with the TEJ, the strongest upper level divergence occurs at 100 hPa, where the raw/de-seasonalized zonal wind speed correlates negatively (−0.71/− 0.23) with the corresponding Ethiopian rainfall at the pentad time-scale. Furthermore, SSTs over the equatorial Pacific, Indian, and southern Atlantic Oceans correlate strongly with contemporary Ethiopian summer rainfall. In general, Ethiopian rainfall is suppressed during El Niño and enhanced during La Niña. This identification and documentation of the regional atmospheric circulation patterns and global SST anomalies directly linked to rainfall variability over Ethiopia/Horn of Africa, are crucial for developing statistical prediction schemes and designing climate model simulations for the region on intra-seasonal to inter-annual time-scales.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-254642017-09-13T15:18:09Z Large-scale atmospheric circulation and global sea surface temperature associations with Horn of Africa June-September rainfall Segele, Z. Lamb, P. Leslie, Lance This study uses correlation, regression, and composite analyses for the period 1970–1999 to explore the relationships between the June–September rainfall in the Horn of Africa (especially Ethiopian) and large-scale regional atmospheric circulation patterns across Africa and the Atlantic and Indian Oceans, and global sea surface temperature (SST) anomalies. Abundant rainfall in the Horn of Africa is associated with enhanced westerlies across western and central Africa. These westerlies are produced by a stronger north-east directed mean sea level pressure (MSLP) gradient resulting from MSLP intensification over the Gulf of Guinea and deepening of the monsoon trough across the Arabian Peninsula. This is reflected by a strong correlation (−0.71) between 5-day (pentad) Ethiopian rainfall and the Gulf of Guinea minus the Arabian Peninsula MSLP difference. This correlation decreases to − 0.39 when the seasonal cycles are removed from both time series. A wet Horn of Africa monsoon is also associated with deep moist air extending up to mid-troposphere and large water vapour transport convergence across much of Ethiopia, a strong Somali low-level jet, and a strong tropical easterly jet (TEJ).Although there are large changes in TEJ strength, the position of the jet axis shows little variation between wet and dry events. Associated with the TEJ, the strongest upper level divergence occurs at 100 hPa, where the raw/de-seasonalized zonal wind speed correlates negatively (−0.71/− 0.23) with the corresponding Ethiopian rainfall at the pentad time-scale. Furthermore, SSTs over the equatorial Pacific, Indian, and southern Atlantic Oceans correlate strongly with contemporary Ethiopian summer rainfall. In general, Ethiopian rainfall is suppressed during El Niño and enhanced during La Niña. This identification and documentation of the regional atmospheric circulation patterns and global SST anomalies directly linked to rainfall variability over Ethiopia/Horn of Africa, are crucial for developing statistical prediction schemes and designing climate model simulations for the region on intra-seasonal to inter-annual time-scales. 2009 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/25464 10.1002/joc.1751 John Wiley & Sons Ltd. unknown
spellingShingle Segele, Z.
Lamb, P.
Leslie, Lance
Large-scale atmospheric circulation and global sea surface temperature associations with Horn of Africa June-September rainfall
title Large-scale atmospheric circulation and global sea surface temperature associations with Horn of Africa June-September rainfall
title_full Large-scale atmospheric circulation and global sea surface temperature associations with Horn of Africa June-September rainfall
title_fullStr Large-scale atmospheric circulation and global sea surface temperature associations with Horn of Africa June-September rainfall
title_full_unstemmed Large-scale atmospheric circulation and global sea surface temperature associations with Horn of Africa June-September rainfall
title_short Large-scale atmospheric circulation and global sea surface temperature associations with Horn of Africa June-September rainfall
title_sort large-scale atmospheric circulation and global sea surface temperature associations with horn of africa june-september rainfall
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/25464