Affiliation:
1. Centre de Recherches de Climatologie, CNRS/Université de Bourgogne, Dijon, France
2. LOCEAN, IRD/Université Pierre et Marie Curie, Paris, France
Abstract
Abstract
Madden–Julian oscillations (MJOs) are extracted over the Indo-Pacific basin using a local mode analysis. The convective perturbations are then projected over a larger domain to evaluate their remote consequences over the West African monsoon (WAM) intraseasonal variability. Rather weak (4–6 W m−2) convective fluctuations occurring in phase with those over the southern Indian basin are found over Africa, confirming the results of Matthews. In reverse, 40-day fluctuations in the WAM, similarly detected and projected over a widened area, demonstrate that a large majority of these events are embedded in the larger-scale patterns of the MJO. The regional amplitude of intraseasonal perturbations of the West African convection is not statistically associated with the amplitude of the MJO over the Indian basin but is instead closely related to background vertical velocity anomalies over Africa, possibly embedded in changes in the regional Walker-type circulation. Subsiding motion over Africa is recorded during the most energetic convective perturbations in the WAM.
Composites analyses over the MJO life cycle, as depicted by the real-time daily indices developed by Wheeler and Hendon, show that positive outgoing longwave radiation (OLR) anomalies during the dry phase are of larger amplitude and spatially more coherent than negative anomalies during the wet phase, especially over the Sahel region. Over West Africa, the phase of suppressed convection is thus of greater importance for the region than the phase of enhanced convection. Rain gauge records fully confirm these results. The MJO appears to be significantly involved in the occurrences of dry spells during the monsoon over the Sahel, whereas large-scale convective clusters are only restricted to the equatorial latitudes and thus affect the Guinean belt, which experiences its short dry season at this time of the year.
Publisher
American Meteorological Society
Cited by
40 articles.
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