4.6 Article

A westward extension of the warm pool leads to a westward extension of the Walker circulation, drying eastern Africa

Journal

CLIMATE DYNAMICS
Volume 37, Issue 11-12, Pages 2417-2435

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00382-010-0984-y

Keywords

East Africa; Indian Ocean; Precipitation; Drought; Tropical warm pool; Climate change

Funding

  1. U.S. Agency for International Development Famine Early Warning System Network under U.S. Geological Survey [G09AC00001]
  2. National Aeronautics and Space Administration under Precipitation Science [NNX07AG266]

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Observations and simulations link anthropogenic greenhouse and aerosol emissions with rapidly increasing Indian Ocean sea surface temperatures (SSTs). Over the past 60 years, the Indian Ocean warmed two to three times faster than the central tropical Pacific, extending the tropical warm pool to the west by similar to 40A degrees longitude (> 4,000 km). This propensity toward rapid warming in the Indian Ocean has been the dominant mode of interannual variability among SSTs throughout the tropical Indian and Pacific Oceans (55A degrees E-140A degrees W) since at least 1948, explaining more variance than anomalies associated with the El Nio-Southern Oscillation (ENSO). In the atmosphere, the primary mode of variability has been a corresponding trend toward greatly increased convection and precipitation over the tropical Indian Ocean. The temperature and rainfall increases in this region have produced a westward extension of the western, ascending branch of the atmospheric Walker circulation. Diabatic heating due to increased mid-tropospheric water vapor condensation elicits a westward atmospheric response that sends an easterly flow of dry air aloft toward eastern Africa. In recent decades (1980-2009), this response has suppressed convection over tropical eastern Africa, decreasing precipitation during the 'long-rains' season of March-June. This trend toward drought contrasts with projections of increased rainfall in eastern Africa and more 'El Nio-like' conditions globally by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Increased Indian Ocean SSTs appear likely to continue to strongly modulate the Warm Pool circulation, reducing precipitation in eastern Africa, regardless of whether the projected trend in ENSO is realized. These results have important food security implications, informing agricultural development, environmental conservation, and water resource planning.

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