non-linear intensification of sahel rainfall as a possible dynamic response to future warming
;J. Schewe;A. Levermann;A. Levermann;A. Levermann
itinéraires2017Vol. 8pp. 495-505
173
schewe2017earthnon-linear
Abstract
Projections of the response of Sahel rainfall to future global
warming diverge significantly. Meanwhile, paleoclimatic records suggest that
Sahel rainfall is capable of abrupt transitions in response to gradual
forcing. Here we present climate modeling evidence for the possibility of an
abrupt intensification of Sahel rainfall under future climate change.
Analyzing 30 coupled global climate model simulations, we identify seven
models where central Sahel rainfall increases by 40 to 300 % over the
21st century, owing to a northward expansion of the West
African monsoon domain. Rainfall in these models is non-linearly related to
sea surface temperature (SST) in the tropical Atlantic and Mediterranean
moisture source regions, intensifying abruptly beyond a certain SST warming
level. We argue that this behavior is consistent with a self-amplifying
dynamic–thermodynamical feedback, implying that the gradual increase in
oceanic moisture availability under warming could trigger a sudden
intensification of monsoon rainfall far inland of today's core monsoon
region.