The Drought of Amazonia in 2005

Author:

Marengo José A.1,Nobre Carlos A.1,Tomasella Javier1,Oyama Marcos D.2,Sampaio de Oliveira Gilvan1,de Oliveira Rafael1,Camargo Helio1,Alves Lincoln M.1,Brown I. Foster3

Affiliation:

1. CPTEC/INPE, Cachoeira Paulista, São Paulo, Brazil

2. Divisão de Ciências Atmosféricas Centro Técnico Aeroespacial, Instituto de Aeronáutica e Espaço, São Jose dos Campos, São Paulo, Brazil

3. Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, Massachusetts, and Zoobotanical Park, Federal University of Acre, Acre, Rio Branco, Brazil

Abstract

Abstract In 2005, large sections of southwestern Amazonia experienced one of the most intense droughts of the last hundred years. The drought severely affected human population along the main channel of the Amazon River and its western and southwestern tributaries, the Solimões (also known as the Amazon River in the other Amazon countries) and the Madeira Rivers, respectively. The river levels fell to historic low levels and navigation along these rivers had to be suspended. The drought did not affect central or eastern Amazonia, a pattern different from the El Niño–related droughts in 1926, 1983, and 1998. The choice of rainfall data used influenced the detection of the drought. While most datasets (station or gridded data) showed negative departures from mean rainfall, one dataset exhibited above-normal rainfall in western Amazonia. The causes of the drought were not related to El Niño but to (i) the anomalously warm tropical North Atlantic, (ii) the reduced intensity in northeast trade wind moisture transport into southern Amazonia during the peak summertime season, and (iii) the weakened upward motion over this section of Amazonia, resulting in reduced convective development and rainfall. The drought conditions were intensified during the dry season into September 2005 when humidity was lower than normal and air temperatures were 3°–5°C warmer than normal. Because of the extended dry season in the region, forest fires affected part of southwestern Amazonia. Rains returned in October 2005 and generated flooding after February 2006.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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