African Climate Change Flashcards

CCV

1
Q

Clausius-Clapeyron = 1C increase in air temp = 7% more water vapour

A

energetic constraint = 1C increase in temp = 1-3% increase in precipitation rates (Held and Soden, 2006)

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2
Q

‘wet-get-wetter’ and ‘dry-get-drier’ (Held and Sodon, 2006)

A

amplification of current patterns = more moisture convergence in tropics but less moisture convergence in subtropics

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3
Q

Upped ante mechanism/ ‘rich-get-richer’ (Neelin et al., 2006)

A

margins of convection will get drier while regions of high convection get wetter -> because more moisture is required to sustain convection

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4
Q

Africa is very likely to warm ~1.5x global mean warming in W, E, and S (IPCC, 2007)

A

Drying in N Africa
Wetting in E Africa
Drying in S. Africa (localised due to orographic influence)
(IPCC, 2007)

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5
Q

African tropical rain belt -> shifts seasonally = local changes in precipitation (IPCC, 2007)

A

Spatially confined convection and precipitation, associated with ITCZ
Single rainy season in poleward edges of the tropical region, but double rainy season in equatorial areas (Giannini et al., 2008)

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6
Q

East Africa precipitation

A

MAM ‘long rains’ -> 2mm/day and OND ‘short rains’ -> tend to be weaker (Yang et al., 2015)

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7
Q

East Africa Variability (1)

A

Somali Jet -> supplies moisture for precipitation except for J-A-S = jet reverses for IOM and J-F = as moisture exported to C. Africa and S. Africa (Yang et al., 2015)

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8
Q

East Africa Variability (2)

A

Turkana Jet -> between Kenyan and Ethiopian Highland = water vapour funnels through -> divergence in tunnel and upper atmospheric convergence = regional aridity (Nicholson, 2016; Vizy and Cook, 2019)
- strong jet = 15-16m/s moisture carried away from Kenya
- weak jet = precipitation across Kenya
reanalysis = underpredicts the jet

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9
Q

East Africa Variability -> short rain (Nicholson et al., 2015)

A

Indian Ocean Dipole
IOD+ = wet -> increased SSTs off horn of Africa + westerlies
IOD- = dry -> decreased SSTs off the horn of Africa = weaker westerlies
- Strongest IOD+ in 40 years -> very high SSTs in western Indian Ocean -> led to 2019 flooding (Wainwright et al., 2021).

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10
Q

East Africa Variability -> long rains

A

March-May La Niña = westerly wind anomalies produced-> influence moisture flux (Nicholson and Kim, 1998)
The MJO (Pohl and Camberlin, 2006) or cyclones over the I.O. (Finney et al., 2019) alter moisture flux

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11
Q

observed changes - East Africa = decline in long rains and more variability in short rains

A

East African Climate Paradox -> CMIP5 models imply increase in precipitation but decrease in observed record (Wainwright et al., 2019) + HadGEM3-G2 model (James et al., 2018) + CMIP3 (Cook and Vizy, 2012)

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12
Q

convective parameterisation = early onset biases of short rains as it increases moist static energy and alters long rains = CMIP5 models undergo parameterisation (Wainwright et al., 2021)

A

causes for wet biases in the short rains = Equatorial Indian Ocean winds simulated poorly -> observations highlight a low-level westerly flow during the short rains, but models depict an easterly flow at the equator -> decreases confidence in models (Hirons et al., 2018) -> 50% of models unable to capture the easterlies (Hirons and Turner, 2018).

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13
Q

models are temporally poor -> overestimation at short rains and underestimate the long rains (Yang et al., 2014)

A

GCMs -> better at simulating the E. African climate but imply short rains and long rains = same intensity (Wainwright et al., 2021)

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14
Q

Future Changes to E. Africa in CMIP

A

wetting in E. Africa -> uncertain as complex topography not represented well in GCMs (Giannini, 2019)
Future wetting = SSTs alter regions of convection (Rowell and Chadwick, 2019) -> found to be unlikely when examined as I.O. SST increases on specific humidity unlikely.
Thermodynamic changes = more intense precipitation (Kendon et al., 2019)

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15
Q

Future Changes to E. Africa -> convection permitting-models

A

CP4 -> regional model to analyse convection -> 4km resolution -> predicts increased precipitation during the two rainy seasons -> long rains will start earlier + short rains start later but will exceed long rains (Wainwright et al., 2021)

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16
Q

Future Changes to E. Africa -> 21C model

A

regional model -> short rains start later but increase in precipitation rates + long rains start later but decrease in precipitation rate (Cook and Vizy, 2013).
- Drying in long rains = Somali Jet weakens so less moisture enters for the long rains -> controlled by the heat low across the Arabian Peninsula (Cook and Vizy, 2013)

17
Q

issues with modelling in E. Africa

A

need convective permitting models
Needed to represent the Turkana Jet -> important for moisture transport -> poor simulation = wet bias (Munday et al., 2021).
 Imply wetting -> due to increased easterly moisture transport from I.O -> increased precipitation (Finney et al., 2020)

18
Q

Process-based analysis is important

A

analyses the accuracy of model simulations to analyse whether projection outcomes are likely (James et al., 2018)

19
Q

Central Africa precipitation

A

Bimodal precipitation -> MAM (long rains) and SON (short rains) -> different rates between NH and SH w/ SH drier during the dry phase (Cook and Vizy, 2022).
- Short rains are less intense = form simultaneously with the Saharan heat low which causes moisture divergence = reduced precipitation rates (Cook and Vizy, 2022).

20
Q

Central Africa observations

A

Poor observational coverage -> in 2012 only 3 observation sites collecting data (Creese and Washington, 2016) -> means cannot challenge model simulations

21
Q

Central Africa MCSs -> 70% total rainfall, but their dynamics in the Congo Basin are unknown -> high lightning strike activity (Jackson et al., 2009) -> high CAPE over the Congo Basin

A

MCS formation occurs over: Ethiopian Highlands, Mount Cameroon, Lake Victoria and west of the Congo Basin due to African easterly jets (Jackson et al., 2009).
- MCSs are represented poorly in GCMs w/ regional component (James et al., 2018)

22
Q

Central Africa Variability - Models

A

High spread of variability across stations -> ensemble mean precipitation does not agree with a single model (Creese and Washington, 2016) -> greatest variability in models in November while smallest variability in July (Creese and Washington, 2016)

23
Q

Central Africa Variability

A

Formation of wet seasons -> controlled by zonal convergence associated with warm Atlantic SSTs and cool I.O. SSTs (Pokam et al., 2012)
Congo Basin Walker Circulation -> connected to E. Atlantic Cold Tongue -> forms during alternative periods to precipitation though (Cook and Vizy, 2016)

24
Q

Central Africa Projections -> models imply wetting but observations imply drying

A
25
Q

Central Africa Projections -> Cook et al. (2020) -> model identified a decrease in precipitation from 1979-2017 due to anthropogenic climate change impacting the Saharan and Angolan Heat Lows (SHL and AL)

A

C.C. -> thermal lows shift poleward = convergence N and S. of the Congo Basin -> reduction in moisture convergence across C. Basin (Cook and Vizy, 2019)
process-based analysis -> confirmed convergence = meridional wind convergence at 800-500hPa = precipitation across the Congo Basin and changes to this convergence = reduction in precipitation (Cook and Vizy, 2022)

26
Q

Central Africa Observations

A

clear drying trend -> Climate Research Unit N. Congo Basin = 3% reduction/decade and S. Congo Basin = 2% reduction/decade (Cook and Vizy, 2020) -> caused by C.C. on SHL and AL

27
Q

Central Africa -> process-based analysis on SON (short rains) -> CMIP5 = wetting across N. Central Africa (Creese et al., 2019)

A

 Wetting trends -> had SST biases across Eastern Tropical Atlantic = moisture flux through westerlies overemphasised (Creese et al., 2019).
 Models tend to depict these westerlies as yearly but they are seasonal -> overstimulates moisture into southern and eastern Africa (James et al., 2018).
 ½ models from CMIP and some from CORDEX did actually indicate drying trends (Haensler et al., 2013).

28
Q

Central Africa -> process-based analysis on Congo Basin

A

increase in short rains (SON) as N and S African easterly jets and Tropical Easterly Jet form leading to enhanced MCS forming (Jackson et al., 2009; Haensler et al., 2013) -> tend to be underrepresented in models which predict drying -> correct simulation would imply wetting as C.C. would weaken the S african easterly jet -> more moisture taken out the region (Creese et al., 2019)