4.6 Article

Projected changes in Malawi's growing season

Journal

CLIMATE DYNAMICS
Volume 45, Issue 5-6, Pages 1673-1698

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00382-014-2424-x

Keywords

Malawi Growing season; Regional climate model; Climate change impacts; Kalahari anticyclone; Thermal low; African rainfall

Funding

  1. USAID (Climate Change Resilient Development award) [13-754-UTA]
  2. University of Texas Jackson School of Geosciences seed grant program
  3. Office of Science, U.S. Department of Energy

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Regional climate model projections at 30-km resolution are used to predict future mid-century and late-century growing season changes over Malawi due to global warming under the Representative Concentration Pathway 8.5 business-as-usual emissions forcing scenario. Three different methods for estimating growing season characteristics are applied and evaluated. All three methods yield reasonable growing season length, onset, and demise date estimates over Malawi given the wide range of uncertainty of the observations. The projections indicate the likelihood for a shorter growing season in the future over Malawi south of 13.5A degrees S. At mid-century the growing season length is predicted to be 20-40 % (20-55 days) shorter over the southernmost districts and 5-20 % (5-30 days) shorter over the central districts. By late-century the length is predicted to be 25-55 % (20-70 days) shorter with significant differences extending into northern Malawi. The shorter growing season is primarily associated with an earlier demise date, as no significant change in the onset date is predicted. Analysis of the regional circulation and horizontal moisture flux transport indicates that the earlier demise is associated with an intensification of the thermal low over the Kalahari Desert to the south and west of Malawi and an expansion of the mid-tropospheric Kalahari anticyclone over southern Africa. The stronger thermal low/anticyclone enhances the moisture flux divergence over Malawi suppressing the convective activity at the end of the wet season.

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