Abstract
Future projections of precipitation at regional scales are vital to inform climate change adaptation activities. Therefore, is it important to quantify projected changes and associated uncertainty, and understand model processes responsible. This paper addresses these challenges for southern Africa and the adjacent Indian Ocean focusing on the local wet season. Precipitation projections for the end of the twenty-first century indicate a pronounced dipole pattern in the CMIP5 multimodel mean. The dipole indicates future wetting (drying) to the north (south) of the climatological axis of maximum rainfall, implying a northward shift of the ITCZ and south Indian Ocean convergence zone that is not consistent with a simple “wet get wetter” pattern. This pattern is most pronounced in early austral summer, suggesting a later and shorter wet season over much of southern Africa. Using a decomposition method we determine physical mechanisms underlying this dipole pattern of projected change, and the associated intermodel uncertainty. The projected dipole pattern is largely associated with the dynamical component of change indicative of shifts in the location of convection. Over the Indian Ocean, this apparent northward shift in the ITCZ may reflect the response to changes in the north–south SST gradient over the Indian Ocean, consistent with a “warmest get wetter” mechanism. Over land subtropical drying is relatively robust, particularly in the early wet season. This has contributions from dynamical shifts in the location of convection, which may be related to regional SST structures in the southern Indian Ocean, and the thermodynamic decline in relative humidity. Implications for understanding and potentially constraining uncertainty in projections are discussed.
Highlights
Africa is highly vulnerable to climate change, evident from the reliance on seasonal precipitation for Denotes content that is immediately available upon publication as open access
This paper focuses on projected regional precipitation changes over southern Africa (SA) and the adjacent southwest Indian Ocean (SWIO) sector (08–308S, 108E–808E), where wet season rainfall is dominated by the south Indian Ocean convergence zone (SIOCZ) (Cook 2000; Lazenby et al 2016)
We consider the annual cycle of zonally averaged multimodel mean (MMM) precipitation changes over our study domain for land and ocean regions (Figs. 2a and 2b, respectively)
Summary
Africa is highly vulnerable to climate change, evident from the reliance on seasonal precipitation for Denotes content that is immediately available upon publication as open access. (i) Changes in precipitation averaged over the regions of wetting–drying from the MMM are more robust over land than ocean for both the future wetting and drying signals (i.e., total uncertainty in DP is lower for land compared to ocean; Fig. 7).
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