Abstract

Abstract Regional precipitation recycling may constitute a feedback mechanism affecting soil moisture memory and the persistence of anomalously dry or wet states. Bulk methods, which estimate recycling based on time-averaged variables, have been applied on a global basis, but these methods may underestimate recycling by neglecting the effects of correlated transients. A back-trajectory method identifies the evaporative sources of vapor contributing to precipitation events by tracing air motion backward in time through the analysis grid of a data-assimilating numerical model. The back-trajectory method has been applied to several large regions; in this paper it is extended to all global land areas for 1979–2003. Meteorological information (wind vectors, humidity, surface pressure, and evaporation) are taken from the NCEP–Department of Energy (DOE) reanalysis, and a hybrid 3-hourly precipitation dataset is produced to establish the termini of the trajectories. The effect of grid size on the recycling fraction is removed using an empirical power-law relationship; this allows comparison among any land areas on a latitude–longitude grid. Recycling ratios are computed on a monthly basis for a 25-yr period. The annual and seasonal averages are consistent with previous estimates in terms of spatial patterns, but the trajectory method generally gives higher estimates of recycling than a bulk method, using compatible spatial scales. High northern latitude regions show the largest amplitude in the annual cycle of recycling, with maxima in late spring/early summer. Amplitudes in arid regions are small in absolute terms, but large relative to their mean values. Regions with strong interannual variability in recycling do not correspond directly to regions with strong intra-annual variability. The average recycling ratio at a spatial scale of 105 km2 for all land areas of the globe is 4.5%; on a global basis, recycling shows a weak positive trend over the 25 yr, driven largely by increases at high northern latitudes.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call