Rainfall variability related to sea surface temperature anomalies in a Pacific–Andean basin into Ecuador and Peru

The spatiotemporal modes of seasonal rainfall variability and their relation with sea surface temperature anomalies (SSTA 1.2 indices) are examined in the transition from the coastal plain towards the western Andes cordillera in southern Ecuador/northwestern Peru using instrumental records (1970–200...

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Main Authors: L. Pineda, V. Ntegeka, P. Willems
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2013-04-01
Series:Advances in Geosciences
Online Access:http://www.adv-geosci.net/33/53/2013/adgeo-33-53-2013.pdf
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spelling doaj-81b1cb12d1ec4b7c8122af74378107a62020-11-24T22:26:04ZengCopernicus PublicationsAdvances in Geosciences1680-73401680-73592013-04-0133536210.5194/adgeo-33-53-2013Rainfall variability related to sea surface temperature anomalies in a Pacific–Andean basin into Ecuador and PeruL. Pineda0V. Ntegeka1P. Willems2KU Leuven, Department of Civil Engineering, Hydraulic section, 3001 Leuven, BelgiumKU Leuven, Department of Civil Engineering, Hydraulic section, 3001 Leuven, BelgiumKU Leuven, Department of Civil Engineering, Hydraulic section, 3001 Leuven, BelgiumThe spatiotemporal modes of seasonal rainfall variability and their relation with sea surface temperature anomalies (SSTA 1.2 indices) are examined in the transition from the coastal plain towards the western Andes cordillera in southern Ecuador/northwestern Peru using instrumental records (1970–2000) collected from the Catamayo–Chira basin. A multi-criteria data analysis is conducted within different elevation ranges. The criteria involve rotated principal components, cross correlations and temporal changes of anomalies in rainfall quantiles. <br><br> The results confirm that SSTA 1.2 indices influence rainfall variability over the coastal plain (< 510 m a.s.l.) where forcing is dominant within December–May. The El Niño Southern Oscillation also plays a role inland of the coastal plain where a region of ENSO-like rainfall variability is found on the southeastern part of the basin (4°30'–5° S/79°15'–80° W) within March–May (MAM). This suggests that inland distance and elevation are only partial controls of ocean–atmospheric forcing up to ~ 1300 m a.s.l. Our analysis also provides evidence of the SSTA 1.2 indices influence in a large altitudinal range ~ 1400–2700 m a.s.l. confined to the southeastern basin. This region is found consistently perturbed by ENSO within MAM. We conclude that geo-morphological features of the southwestern Ecuadorian Andean ridges play a twofold role in the control of ocean–atmospheric forcing. They can modulate the atmospheric circulation, leading to a dissipation of the signal, or they might favor meteorological processes, leading to enhancement of orographic precipitation. This would explain the observed ENSO signals in instrumental records at locations as high as 2700 m a.s.l.http://www.adv-geosci.net/33/53/2013/adgeo-33-53-2013.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author L. Pineda
V. Ntegeka
P. Willems
spellingShingle L. Pineda
V. Ntegeka
P. Willems
Rainfall variability related to sea surface temperature anomalies in a Pacific–Andean basin into Ecuador and Peru
Advances in Geosciences
author_facet L. Pineda
V. Ntegeka
P. Willems
author_sort L. Pineda
title Rainfall variability related to sea surface temperature anomalies in a Pacific–Andean basin into Ecuador and Peru
title_short Rainfall variability related to sea surface temperature anomalies in a Pacific–Andean basin into Ecuador and Peru
title_full Rainfall variability related to sea surface temperature anomalies in a Pacific–Andean basin into Ecuador and Peru
title_fullStr Rainfall variability related to sea surface temperature anomalies in a Pacific–Andean basin into Ecuador and Peru
title_full_unstemmed Rainfall variability related to sea surface temperature anomalies in a Pacific–Andean basin into Ecuador and Peru
title_sort rainfall variability related to sea surface temperature anomalies in a pacific–andean basin into ecuador and peru
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Advances in Geosciences
issn 1680-7340
1680-7359
publishDate 2013-04-01
description The spatiotemporal modes of seasonal rainfall variability and their relation with sea surface temperature anomalies (SSTA 1.2 indices) are examined in the transition from the coastal plain towards the western Andes cordillera in southern Ecuador/northwestern Peru using instrumental records (1970–2000) collected from the Catamayo–Chira basin. A multi-criteria data analysis is conducted within different elevation ranges. The criteria involve rotated principal components, cross correlations and temporal changes of anomalies in rainfall quantiles. <br><br> The results confirm that SSTA 1.2 indices influence rainfall variability over the coastal plain (< 510 m a.s.l.) where forcing is dominant within December–May. The El Niño Southern Oscillation also plays a role inland of the coastal plain where a region of ENSO-like rainfall variability is found on the southeastern part of the basin (4°30'–5° S/79°15'–80° W) within March–May (MAM). This suggests that inland distance and elevation are only partial controls of ocean–atmospheric forcing up to ~ 1300 m a.s.l. Our analysis also provides evidence of the SSTA 1.2 indices influence in a large altitudinal range ~ 1400–2700 m a.s.l. confined to the southeastern basin. This region is found consistently perturbed by ENSO within MAM. We conclude that geo-morphological features of the southwestern Ecuadorian Andean ridges play a twofold role in the control of ocean–atmospheric forcing. They can modulate the atmospheric circulation, leading to a dissipation of the signal, or they might favor meteorological processes, leading to enhancement of orographic precipitation. This would explain the observed ENSO signals in instrumental records at locations as high as 2700 m a.s.l.
url http://www.adv-geosci.net/33/53/2013/adgeo-33-53-2013.pdf
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