4.7 Article

The feasibility of reconstructing hydroclimate over West Africa using tree-ring chronologies in the Mediterranean region

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS
Volume 17, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/ac79c0

Keywords

West Africa; Mediterranean; hydroclimate; tree-ring network; teleconnection; drought atlas

Funding

  1. Northern Gulf Institute at Mississippi State University from NOAA's Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research, US Department of Commerce [NA16OAR4320199]
  2. NSF [AGS-2001949, AGS-2102759]

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This study uses remote tree rings to reconstruct the hydroclimate of West Africa, demonstrating the relationship between West African Monsoon and Mediterranean Sea surface temperatures. The results show that even without local tree ring data, this method can accurately capture the hydroclimate variability in West Africa.
Dendrochronology in West Africa has not yet been developed despite encouraging reports suggesting the potential for long tree-ring reconstructions of hydroclimate in the tropics. This paper shows that even in the absence of local tree chronologies, it is possible to reconstruct the hydroclimate of a region using remote tree rings. We present the West Sub-Saharan Drought Atlas (WSDA), a new paleoclimatic reconstruction of West African hydroclimate based on tree-ring chronologies from the Mediterranean Region, made possible by the teleconnected climate relationship between the West African Monsoon and Mediterranean Sea surface temperatures. The WSDA is a one-half degree gridded reconstruction of summer Palmer Drought Severity indices from 1500 to 2018 CE, produced using ensemble point-by-point regression. Calibration and verification statistics of the WSDA indicate that it has significant skill over most of its domain. The three leading modes of hydroclimate variability in West Africa are accurately reproduced by the WSDA, demonstrating strong skill compared to regional instrumental precipitation and drought indices. The WSDA can be used to study the hydroclimate of West Africa outside the limit of the longest observed record and for integration and comparison with other proxy and archaeological data. It is also an essential first step toward developing and using local tree-ring chronologies to reconstruct West Africa's hydroclimate.

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