The Effect of Explicit Convection on Couplings between Rainfall, Humidity, and Ascent over Africa under Climate Change

Author:

Jackson Lawrence S.1,Finney Declan L.1,Kendon Elizabeth J.2,Marsham John H.3,Parker Douglas J.1,Stratton Rachel A.2,Tomassini Lorenzo2,Tucker Simon2

Affiliation:

1. School of Earth and Environment, University of Leeds, Leeds, United Kingdom

2. Met Office, Exeter, United Kingdom

3. National Centre for Atmospheric Science, and School of Earth and Environment, University of Leeds, Leeds, United Kingdom

Abstract

AbstractThe Hadley circulation and tropical rain belt are dominant features of African climate. Moist convection provides ascent within the rain belt, but must be parameterized in climate models, limiting predictions. Here, we use a pan-African convection-permitting model (CPM), alongside a parameterized convection model (PCM), to analyze how explicit convection affects the rain belt under climate change. Regarding changes in mean climate, both models project an increase in total column water (TCW), a widespread increase in rainfall, and slowdown of subtropical descent. Regional climate changes are similar for annual mean rainfall but regional changes of ascent typically strengthen less or weaken more in the CPM. Over a land-only meridional transect of the rain belt, the CPM mean rainfall increases less than in the PCM (5% vs 14%) but mean vertical velocity at 500 hPa weakens more (17% vs 10%). These changes mask more fundamental changes in underlying distributions. The decrease in 3-hourly rain frequency and shift from lighter to heavier rainfall are more pronounced in the CPM and accompanied by a shift from weak to strong updrafts with the enhancement of heavy rainfall largely due to these dynamic changes. The CPM has stronger coupling between intense rainfall and higher TCW. This yields a greater increase in rainfall contribution from events with greater TCW, with more rainfall for a given large-scale ascent, and so favors slowing of that ascent. These findings highlight connections between the convective-scale and larger-scale flows and emphasize that limitations of parameterized convection have major implications for planning adaptation to climate change.

Funder

Natural Environment Research Council

European Union Seventh Framework Programme

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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