Study
finds Southern Hemisphere becoming drier
A
decline in April-May rainfall over south-east Australia is associated
with a southward expansion of the subtropical dry-zone according to
research published today in Scientific Reports, a primary research
journal from the publishers of Nature.
4
October, 2012
CSIRO
scientists Wenju Cai, Tim Cowan and Marcus Thatcher explored why
autumn rainfall has been in decline across south-eastern Australia
since the 1970s, a period that included the devastating Millennium
drought from 1997-2009.
Previous
research into what has been driving the decline in autumn rainfall
across regions like southern Australia has pointed the finger at a
southward shift in the storm tracks and weather systems during the
late 20th century. However, the extent to which these regional
rainfall reductions are attributable to the poleward expansion of the
subtropical dry-zone has not been clarified before now.
Mr
Cowan said rainfall patterns in the subtropics are known to be
influenced by the Hadley cell, the large-scale atmospheric
circulation that transports heat from the tropics to the sub-tropics.
"There
has been a southward expansion of the edge of the Hadley cell –
also called subtropical dry-zone – over the past 30 years, with the
strongest expansion occurring in mid-late autumn, or April to May,
ranging from 200 to 400 kilometres," Mr Cowan said. The CSIRO
researchers found that the autumn southward expansion of the
subtropical dry-zone is greatest over south-eastern Australia, and to
a lesser extent, over the Southern Ocean to the south of Africa.
"The
Hadley cell is comprised of a number of individual branches, so the
impact of a southward shift of the subtropical dry-zone on rainfall
is not the same across the different semi-arid regions of the
Southern Hemisphere," says CSIRO's Dr Wenju Cai.
The
researchers tested the hypothesis that the dry-zone expansion would
give rise to a southward shift in the average rainfall during April
and May, and questioned how rainfall across semi-arid regions,
including southern-coastal Chile and southern Africa, would be
affected.
"During
April and May, when the dry-zone expansion is strong, rainfall over
south-eastern Africa, south-eastern Australia and southern-coastal
Chile is higher than over regions immediately to their north,"
Dr Cai said.
Using
high-quality observations and an atmospheric model the CSIRO team
found that for south-eastern Australia, up to 85% of recent rainfall
reduction can be accounted for by replacing south-eastern Australia
rainfall with rainfall 400km to the north. Such a southward shift of
rainfall can explain only a small portion of the southern Africa
rainfall trend, but none of the autumn drying observed over southern
Chile.
"For
south-east Australia, autumn is an important wetting season," Dr
Cai explained. "Good autumn rainfall wets the soil and
effectively allows for vital runoff from follow-on winter and spring
rain to flow into catchments."
According
to the study an important issue remains as to why the poleward
expansion is largest in autumn, and there is still uncertainty about
the role of external forcings – such as greenhouse gases – as
climate models underestimate the southward expansion of the Hadley
cell edge.
This
research was conducted through CSIRO's Water for a Healthy Country
Flagship, and was funded by the Goyder Institute for Water Research
and the Australian Climate Change Science Programme. Wenju Cai, Tim
Cowan and Marcus Thatcher are from CSIRO's Marine and Atmospheric
Research division.

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