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    Integration of Weather System Variability to Multidecadal Regional Climate Change: The West African Sudan–Sahel Zone, 1951–98

    Source: Journal of Climate:;2006:;volume( 019 ):;issue: 020::page 5343
    Author:
    Bell, Michael A.
    ,
    Lamb, Peter J.
    DOI: 10.1175/JCLI4020.1
    Publisher: American Meteorological Society
    Abstract: Since the late 1960s, the West African Sudan?Sahel zone (10°?18°N) has experienced persistent and often severe drought, which is among the most undisputed and largest regional climate changes in the last half-century. Previous documentation of the drought generally has used monthly, seasonal, and annual rainfall totals and departures, in a standard ?climate? approach that overlooks the underlying weather system variability. Most Sudan?Sahel rainfall occurs during June?September and is delivered by westward-propagating, linear-type, mesoscale convective systems [disturbance lines (DLs)] that typically have much longer north?south (102?103 km) than east?west (10?102 km) dimensions. Here, a large set of daily rainfall data is analyzed to relate DL and regional climate variability on intraseasonal-to-multidecadal time scales for 1951?98. Rain gauge?based indices of DL frequency, size, and intensity are evaluated on a daily basis for four 440-km square ?catchments? that extend across most of the West African Sudan?Sahel (18°W?4°E) and are then distilled into 1951?98 time series of 10-day and seasonal frequency/magnitude summary statistics. This approach is validated using Tropical Applications of Meteorology Using Satellite Data (TAMSAT) satellite IR cold cloud duration statistics for the same 1995?98 DLs. Results obtained for all four catchments are remarkably similar on each time scale. Long-term (1951?98) average DL size/organization increases monotonically from early June to late August and then decreases strongly during September. In contrast, average DL intensity maximizes 10?30 days earlier than DL size/organization and is distributed more symmetrically within the rainy season for all catchments except the westernmost, where DL intensity tracks DL size/organization very closely. Intraseasonal and interannual DL variability is documented using sets of very deficient (8) and much more abundant (7) rainy seasons during 1951?98. The predominant mode of rainfall extremes involves near-season-long suppression or enhancement of the seasonal cycles of DL size/organization and intensity, especially during the late July?late August rainy season peak. Other extreme seasons result solely from peak season anomalies. On the multidecadal scale, the dramatic decline in seasonal rainfall totals from the early 1950s to the mid-1980s is shown to result from pronounced downtrends in DL size/organization and intensity. Surprisingly, this DL shrinking?fragmentation?weakening is not accompanied by increases in catchment rainless days (i.e., total DL absence). Like the seasonal rainfall totals, DL size/organization and intensity increase slightly after the mid-1980s.
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      Integration of Weather System Variability to Multidecadal Regional Climate Change: The West African Sudan–Sahel Zone, 1951–98

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    http://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4221157
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    contributor authorBell, Michael A.
    contributor authorLamb, Peter J.
    date accessioned2017-06-09T17:02:45Z
    date available2017-06-09T17:02:45Z
    date copyright2006/10/01
    date issued2006
    identifier issn0894-8755
    identifier otherams-78483.pdf
    identifier urihttp://onlinelibrary.yabesh.ir/handle/yetl/4221157
    description abstractSince the late 1960s, the West African Sudan?Sahel zone (10°?18°N) has experienced persistent and often severe drought, which is among the most undisputed and largest regional climate changes in the last half-century. Previous documentation of the drought generally has used monthly, seasonal, and annual rainfall totals and departures, in a standard ?climate? approach that overlooks the underlying weather system variability. Most Sudan?Sahel rainfall occurs during June?September and is delivered by westward-propagating, linear-type, mesoscale convective systems [disturbance lines (DLs)] that typically have much longer north?south (102?103 km) than east?west (10?102 km) dimensions. Here, a large set of daily rainfall data is analyzed to relate DL and regional climate variability on intraseasonal-to-multidecadal time scales for 1951?98. Rain gauge?based indices of DL frequency, size, and intensity are evaluated on a daily basis for four 440-km square ?catchments? that extend across most of the West African Sudan?Sahel (18°W?4°E) and are then distilled into 1951?98 time series of 10-day and seasonal frequency/magnitude summary statistics. This approach is validated using Tropical Applications of Meteorology Using Satellite Data (TAMSAT) satellite IR cold cloud duration statistics for the same 1995?98 DLs. Results obtained for all four catchments are remarkably similar on each time scale. Long-term (1951?98) average DL size/organization increases monotonically from early June to late August and then decreases strongly during September. In contrast, average DL intensity maximizes 10?30 days earlier than DL size/organization and is distributed more symmetrically within the rainy season for all catchments except the westernmost, where DL intensity tracks DL size/organization very closely. Intraseasonal and interannual DL variability is documented using sets of very deficient (8) and much more abundant (7) rainy seasons during 1951?98. The predominant mode of rainfall extremes involves near-season-long suppression or enhancement of the seasonal cycles of DL size/organization and intensity, especially during the late July?late August rainy season peak. Other extreme seasons result solely from peak season anomalies. On the multidecadal scale, the dramatic decline in seasonal rainfall totals from the early 1950s to the mid-1980s is shown to result from pronounced downtrends in DL size/organization and intensity. Surprisingly, this DL shrinking?fragmentation?weakening is not accompanied by increases in catchment rainless days (i.e., total DL absence). Like the seasonal rainfall totals, DL size/organization and intensity increase slightly after the mid-1980s.
    publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
    titleIntegration of Weather System Variability to Multidecadal Regional Climate Change: The West African Sudan–Sahel Zone, 1951–98
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume19
    journal issue20
    journal titleJournal of Climate
    identifier doi10.1175/JCLI4020.1
    journal fristpage5343
    journal lastpage5365
    treeJournal of Climate:;2006:;volume( 019 ):;issue: 020
    contenttypeFulltext
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    DSpace software copyright © 2002-2015  DuraSpace
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