Abstract

AbstractClouds are a key element of the climate system. They play a crucial role in modulating solar radiative flux reaching the Earth's surface and influencing environmental conditions. In particular, total cloud cover (TCC) has both direct and indirect influence on agricultural production. Through dialogues with vegetable and rice producers of Northeastern Argentina (NEA), an important productive region in South‐Eastern South America, the key role of cloud cover on crop yields was brought to the forefront. In this study, we present the climatology and observed long‐term changes in TCC in NEA. The analyses are performed based on two independent datasets: TCC ground‐based (GB) observations and satellite‐based estimates from the International Satellite Cloud Climatology Project (ISCCP). The datasets cover a common period, from December 1983 to November 2016 (Satellite Period), while GB TCC observations extend further, from March 1961 to February 2021 (GB Period). To facilitate a more comprehensive examination of GB TCC, we introduce a novel Cloud Index, expressed in a familiar unit (%), which allows the study of its temporal variations. TCC exhibits a distinct annual cycle and substantial spatial variability over NEA, consistently evident in both satellite and GB datasets. Over the Satellite Period (GB Period), we observed a decrease in NEA's TCC in both datasets (GB dataset), with seasonal variations and spatial heterogeneity. We ensured the reliability of our results by comparing the two datasets, which showed similar temporal variability, although the ISCCP Cloud Amount values were larger than the GB TCC. The described TCC climatology and observed changes have considerable implications for NEA's agricultural production and provide a robust foundation for future research. This article generates robust methodological basis for the analysis of this complex variable, a necessary step to explore the forcing of climate variability that modulates cloudiness in future research, and that could facilitate future studies in other regions of South America and the world.

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