Abstract

AbstractWestern Bahia, a region in Northeast Brazil highly dependent on water availability due to the large concentration of irrigated lands, has been suffering from decreasing precipitation in the last decades. The mean climate of Northeast Brazil and its variability have been linked to teleconnections with the Atlantic and Pacific sea surface temperatures, including the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (AMO). This study investigates how large‐scale (AMO) and mesoscale (orographic) interactions are related to precipitation patterns in the region. Time series of precipitation and naturalized flows (corresponding to the flow that would occur in the river section if there were no anthropogenic actions) for the period 1981–2020 are analysed, indicating an average reduction of 11.5% in rainfall since the 1980s. The analyses show a significant (α = 0.05) rainfall reduction in the wettest months, the December and January bimester (DJ). A strong and significant negative correlation between AMO and precipitation (R = −0.62, α = 0.01) indicates a decrease in DJ rainfall when the AMO index is positive. The five rainiest and five driest DJ bimesters between 1981 and 2020 were selected to investigate the changes in atmospheric circulation. In the rainiest years, large‐scale mechanisms interact with the local topography to promote a major convection centre over Western Bahia. The driest years show suppressed convection over the topographic gradient and a change in the convection centre several hundred kilometres to the west. The continued increase in temperatures in the North Atlantic may perpetuate the decline in Western Bahia precipitation, putting pressure on water availability and impacting economic activities in the region.

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