Abstract

Republic of Guinea is one of the West African countries which share form a border with the southern part of the Sahel. It is located in the tropical area where the convective systems activities are intense with strong rainfall. Our results on Standardized Precipitation Index are coherent with the Sahel drought during the 1970s, and a recovery period of rainfall since the last years. The Standardized Thunderstorms Index shows positive anomalies (1981-1997) corresponding to the dry period of rainfall, while a negative anomalies is shown (1998-2010) for the wet period. This study highlights the relationship between thunderstorms and rainfall amounts in Guinea in the context of climate variability. Indeed, by categorizing the rainfall in two groups respectively weak and heavy, we calculated their correlations with thunderstorms. We found significant correlations between weak rainfall and thunderstorms. To appreciate the findings with the standardized anomalies of precipitation and thunderstorms, we also performed Rotations of Empirical Orthogonal Function and Principal Component Analysis to identify the coherent mode of the interannual variability of these parameters. We found that the first mode is the best Empirical Orthogonal Function which is coherent with is the results shown by the Standardized Index of Precipitation and Thunderstorms. To check the significance of each Empirical Orthogonal Function mode, we use the North’s rule of thumb for estimating the sampling errors. It was noticed that no modes was concerned by sampling errors. And then, the rainfall seasonal cycle shows a unimodal rainfall regime, while the thunderstorms’ one indicates a bimodal cycle. Our study could improve knowledge about rainfall amounts and thunderstorms variability, especially in climatic variability context. Key words: Rainfall, thunderstorm, spatio-temporal variability, correlation.

Highlights

  • Republic of Guinea is one of the wettest countries in West Africa

  • The Standardized Thunderstorms Index (STI) exhibits a decrease of thunderstorms in Guinea during the rainfall recovery period with heavy rainfall but low correlated with thunderstorms

  • Regarding the four geophysical regions of Guinea, we have shown that the three ones (LG, Middle Guinea (MG), Upper Guinea (UG)) experienced these episodes of drought like Sahel

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Summary

Introduction

Republic of Guinea is one of the wettest countries in West Africa. The average of its rainfall amount can exceed 3000 mm per year. This rainfall decrease is due to an overall reduction of rainfall in West African area. The interannual signal is mainly affected by the El Niño Southern Oscillation, the Tropical Atlantic basin, and internal atmospheric variability over the region This is coherent with several works done on the Sahel rainfall where the 1970s correspond with a drought from 1970 to 1992, like (Solomon et al, 2007; Grist and Nicholson 2001; Nicholson et al, 2013; Hulme, 1992; Lamb and Peppler, 1992; Janicot and Fontaine, 1993; Le Barbe et al, 2002). Guinea experienced this return to normal rainfall in the year 1994 significantly wet (Figure 1)

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