4.6 Article

Implications of global warming for the climate of African rainforests

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2012.0298

Keywords

climate change; global warming; Central Africa; precipitation; projections; Indian Ocean

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Funding

  1. UK Department for International Development (DFID)
  2. UK Joint 'Department for Energy and Climate Change' (DECC)
  3. 'Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs' (Defra) MOHC Climate Programme [GA01101]
  4. Office of Science, U.S. Department of Energy

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African rainforests are likely to be vulnerable to changes in temperature and precipitation, yet there has been relatively little research to suggest how the regional climate might respond to global warming. This study presents projections of temperature and precipitation indices of relevance to African rainforests, using global climate model experiments to identify local change as a function of global temperature increase. A multi-model ensemble and two perturbed physics ensembles are used, one with over 100 members. In the east of the Congo Basin, most models (92%) show a wet signal, whereas in west equatorial Africa, the majority (73%) project an increase in dry season water deficits. This drying is amplified as global temperature increases, and in over half of coupled models by greater than 3% per degrees C of global warming. Analysis of atmospheric dynamics in a subset of models suggests that this could be partly because of a rearrangement of zonal circulation, with enhanced convection in the Indian Ocean and anomalous subsidence over west equatorial Africa, the Atlantic Ocean and, in some seasons, the Amazon Basin. Further research to assess the plausibility of this and other mechanisms is important, given the potential implications of drying in these rainforest regions.

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