Abstract

AbstractIn recent two decades, North and Northeast China have suffered from severe and persistent droughts while the Yangtze River basin and South China have undergone much more significant heavy rainfall/floods events. This long‐term change in the summer precipitation and associated large‐scale monsoon circulation features have been examined by using the new dataset of 740 surface stations for recent 54 years (1951–2004) and about 123‐yr (1880–2002) records of precipitation in East China. The following new findings have been highlighted: (1) One dominating mode of the inter‐decadal variability of the summer precipitation in China is the near‐80‐yr oscillation. Other modes of 12‐yr and 30–40‐yr oscillations also play an important role in affecting regional inter‐decadal variability. (2) In recent 54 years, the spatial pattern of the inter‐decadal variability of summer precipitation in China is mainly structured with two meridional modes: the dipole pattern and the positive‐negative‐positive (“+ − + ” pattern). In this period, a regime transition of meridional precipitation mode from “+ − + ” pattern to dipole pattern has been completed. In the process of southward movement of much precipitation zone, two abrupt climate changing points that occurred in 1978 and 1992, respectively, were identified. (3) Accompanying the afore‐described precipitation changes, the East Asian summer monsoon have experienced significant weakening, with northward moisture transport and convergence by the East Asian summer monsoon greatly weakened, thus leading to much deficient moisture supply for precipitation in North China. (4) The significant weakening of the component of the tropical upper‐level easterly jet (TEJ) has made a dominating contribution to the weakening of the Asian summer monsoon system. The cooling in the high troposphere at mid‐ and high latitudes and the possible warming at low latitude in the Asian region is likely to be responsible for the inter‐decadal weakening of the TEJ. Copyright © 2007 Royal Meteorological Society

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call