Abstract

Rainfall in southern China reaches its annual peak in early summer (May–June) with strong interannual variability. Using a combination of observational analysis and numerical modeling, the present study investigates the leading modes of this variability and its dynamic drivers. A zonal dipole pattern termed the southern China Dipole (SCD) is found to be the dominant feature in early summer during 1979–2014, and is closely related to a low-level anomalous anticyclone over the Philippine Sea (PSAC) and a Eurasian wave-train pattern over the mid–high latitudes. Linear regressions based on observations and numerical experiments using the CAM5 model suggest that the associated atmospheric circulation anomalies in early summer are linked to decaying El Niño-Southern Oscillation-like sea surface temperature (SST) anomalies in the tropical Pacific, basin-scale SST anomalies in the tropical Indian Ocean, and meridional tripole-like SST anomalies in the North Atlantic in the previous winter to early summer. The tropical Pacific and Indian Ocean SST anomalies primarily exert an impact on the SCD through changing the polarity of the PSAC, while the North Atlantic tripole-like SST anomalies mainly exert a downstream impact on the SCD by inducing a Eurasian wave-train pattern. The North Atlantic tripole-like SST anomalies also make a relatively weak contribution to the variations of the PSAC and SCD through a subtropical teleconnection. Modeling results indicate that the three-basin combined forcing has a greater impact on the SCD and associated circulation anomalies than the individual influence from any single oceanic basin.

Highlights

  • The East Asian summer monsoon plays a dominant role in setting rainfall variability over China in summer (Ding and Chan 2005)

  • From the results presented above, the MJ southern China Dipole (SCD) is closely related to sea surface temperature (SST) anomalies in the tropical Pacific, the tropical Indian Ocean, and the North Atlantic in the previous winter to early summer, which resemble the pattern of the El Niño (La Niña) mature phase in the positive phase of the SCD

  • We found that the early summer SCD and associated atmospheric circulation anomalies are closely related to decaying ENSO-like SST anomalies in the tropical IndoPacific Ocean and tripole-like SST anomalies in the North

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Summary

Introduction

The East Asian summer monsoon plays a dominant role in setting rainfall variability over China in summer (Ding and Chan 2005). We will investigate the linkage between southern China rainfall anomalies in early summer and SST anomalies in the previous winter and spring, and the physical mechanisms responsible, using observations and numerical simulations. The remainder of this manuscript is organized as follows.

Observational data and method
Model and experimental setup
Leading modes of interannual variability
Associated atmospheric circulation anomalies
SST anomalies associated with the South China
Impact of SST anomalies on the atmospheric circulation
Simulations of the forcing mechanism by the CAM5 model
Findings
Summary and discussion
Full Text
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