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Study ties African drought to ocean temperatures

afrol News, 13 October - A strong link has been confirmed between sea surface temperatures and precipitation in Africa's semi-arid Sahel area, according to a new study. Warmer-than-average low latitude waters are hindering rain clouds to form over the African land mass.

Previously, it was not known how much land use changes may have led to the Sahel region's recent history of prolonged drought, or whether variability in ocean temperatures was the primary driver of the region's climate.

The new study finds that "pervasive evidence" indicates that sea surface temperatures, particularly in the Indian Ocean, are the most powerful indicators of precipitation in the Sahel.

Tropical Pacific surface temperature variation, such as that occurring with the El Niño and Southern Oscillation phenomena, have an effect on the variation of year-to-year rainfall, while the Indian and possibly Atlantic Oceans, affect longer term trends.

The new study tracked sea surface temperatures and precipitation rates from 1930-2000, the first time that ocean and climate trends have been studies on a decadal time scale.

If it is true that oceanic warming is the primary driver of precipitation in the Sahel, then by implication climatologists should be able to measure ocean temperatures and predict the likelihood of future precipitation in the Sahel.

The study, which was published in 'Science' on 9 October, was co-authored by Alessandra Giannini, a climate expert with the International Research Institute for Climate Prediction (IRI), a unit of the Earth Institute at Columbia University (US).

As the paper's authors write: "The recent drying trend in the semi-arid Sahel is attributed to warmer-than-average low latitude waters around Africa which, by favoring the establishment of deep convection over the ocean, weaken the continental convergence associated with the monsoon, and engender widespread drought from Senegal to Ethiopia."

- What interests me particularly is the potential for seasonal predictions of precipitation in the Sahel, and all the implications and uses for such predictions, says Ms Giannini.

One of the International Research Institute for Climate Prediction (IRI)'s unique strengths is in research connecting climate with health, agriculture, and other human factors affected by rainfall. For instance, at the IRI connections are being investigated between malaria (a wet season disease), meningitis (a dry season disease) and precipitation in Western Africa.

- Land surface factors do feed back into the climate system of the Sahel, but they are a consequence, not the cause, of variability in precipitation, Ms Giannini explains.


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