4.7 Article

Effect of Teleconnected Land-Atmosphere Coupling on Northeast China Persistent Drought in Spring-Summer of 2017

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLIMATE
Volume 32, Issue 21, Pages 7403-7420

Publisher

AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1175/JCLI-D-19-0175.1

Keywords

Anticyclones; Rossby waves; Drought; Atmosphere-land interaction; Potential vorticity; Soil moisture

Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2018YFA0606002]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41875105, 41861124005]
  3. China Special Fund for Meteorological Research in the Public Interest [GYHY201506001]

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Northeast China (NEC) suffered a severe drought that persisted from March to July of 2017 with profound impacts on agriculture and society, raising an urgent need to understand the mechanism for persistent droughts over midlatitudes. Previous drought mechanism studies focused on either large-scale teleconnections or local land-atmosphere coupling, while less attention was paid to their synergistic effects on drought persistence. Here we show that the 2017 NEC drought was triggered by a strong positive phase of the Arctic Oscillation in March, and maintained by the anticyclone over the area south to Lake Baikal (ASLB) through a quasi-stationary Rossby wave in April-July, accompanied by sinking motion and north wind anomaly. By using a land-atmosphere coupling index based on the persistence of positive feedbacks between the boundary layer and land surface, we find that the coupling states over NEC and ASLB shifted from a wet coupling in March to a persistently strengthened dry coupling in April-July. Over ASLB, the dry coupling and sinking motion increased surface sensible heat, decreased cloud cover, and weakened longwave absorption, resulting in a diabatic heating anomaly in the lower atmosphere and a diabatic cooling anomaly in the upper atmosphere. This anomalous vertical heating profile led to a negative anomaly of potential vorticity at low levels, indicating that the land-atmosphere coupling had a phase-lock effect on the Rossby wave train originating from upstream areas, and therefore maintained the NEC drought over downstream regions. Our study suggests that an upstream quasi-stationary wave pattern strengthened by land-atmosphere coupling should be considered in diagnosing persistent droughts, especially over northern midlatitudes.

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