Abstract

AbstractInteractions between the land and atmosphere play an important role in the precipitation of the Sahel. The African Monsoon Multidisciplinary Analysis Special Observing Period provided observations with which to illuminate potential feedback mechanisms. This case‐study highlights a major storm which developed over northern Mali in an area where a research aircraft was surveying the atmospheric response to soil moisture features. Soil moisture variability is characterized using satellite land‐surface temperature data whilst cloud images illustrate the evolution of the storm and its relationship to the surface.Measurements in the planetary boundary layer (PBL) indicate mesoscale variations in pre‐storm humidity and temperature consistent with high evaporation from wet soils. The storm developed above a dry surface within a wetter region with cells first appearing along a wet–dry soil boundary. This suggests that the storm was triggered in association with low‐level convergence driven by the soil moisture pattern. A gravity wave propagating away from a remote mature storm also appears to have played an important role in the initiation, though only in the region of the soil moisture contrast did deep convection become established. Once organised into a Mesoscale Convective System, convection developed over wet areas as well as dry, and indeed at this stage, convection became more intense over wetter soils. This behaviour is consistent with the large gradients in PBL humidity. The study illustrates the complexity of soil moisture–convection feedback loops and highlights the mechanisms which may operate at different stages of a storm's life cycle. Copyright © 2009 Royal Meteorological Society

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