Rainfall variability over southern Africa

Includes bibliographical references. === Southern Africa is subject to high inter annual rainfall variability and the factors influencing southern African rainfall are not fully understood. The variability has been linked with various sea surface temperature anomalies (SSTAs) in each of the three ma...

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Main Author: Driver, Penny Meredith
Other Authors: Reason, Chris
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/12830
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-128302020-07-22T05:08:00Z Rainfall variability over southern Africa Driver, Penny Meredith Reason, Chris Abiodun, Babatunde Joseph Physical Oceanography Includes bibliographical references. Southern Africa is subject to high inter annual rainfall variability and the factors influencing southern African rainfall are not fully understood. The variability has been linked with various sea surface temperature anomalies (SSTAs) in each of the three major ocean basins as well as variability in the strength and position of regional atmospheric features. One of the atmospheric factors that may play a substantial role in southern African rainfall variability is the Botswana high, a high pressure cell which exists at the 500hPa level and is centred over central Namibia and western Botswana during austral summer. 20th Century reanalysis data is used to further investigate this feature and analysis reveals an association between the strength of the Botswana high and ENSO. Further analysis indicates that a connection between the Botswana high and rainfall over southern Africa not only exists during ENSO years, but is also apparent during neutral years that display ENSO-like characteristics in the Botswana high. This result may assist in producing better rainfall forecasts for non-ENSO years. The frequency of dry days over southern Africa during austral summer is investigated using GPCP observational data. Correlation analysis is generally in agreement with previous studies and showed that dry day frequency(DDF) over the Limpopo and North East Zambia regions is correlated with ENSO, while DDF over coastal northern Angola and central South Africa is correlated with SSTs in the Indian and Atlantic Oceans. The possible role played by DDF during JFM 1998 and JFM 2010 is investigated and results indicate that the distribution of DDF over southern Africa was notably different during these two seasons and may have contributed to the unexpected rainfall experienced over southern Africa. 2015-05-18T14:25:45Z 2015-05-18T14:25:45Z 2014 Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/12830 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Science Department of Oceanography
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Physical Oceanography
spellingShingle Physical Oceanography
Driver, Penny Meredith
Rainfall variability over southern Africa
description Includes bibliographical references. === Southern Africa is subject to high inter annual rainfall variability and the factors influencing southern African rainfall are not fully understood. The variability has been linked with various sea surface temperature anomalies (SSTAs) in each of the three major ocean basins as well as variability in the strength and position of regional atmospheric features. One of the atmospheric factors that may play a substantial role in southern African rainfall variability is the Botswana high, a high pressure cell which exists at the 500hPa level and is centred over central Namibia and western Botswana during austral summer. 20th Century reanalysis data is used to further investigate this feature and analysis reveals an association between the strength of the Botswana high and ENSO. Further analysis indicates that a connection between the Botswana high and rainfall over southern Africa not only exists during ENSO years, but is also apparent during neutral years that display ENSO-like characteristics in the Botswana high. This result may assist in producing better rainfall forecasts for non-ENSO years. The frequency of dry days over southern Africa during austral summer is investigated using GPCP observational data. Correlation analysis is generally in agreement with previous studies and showed that dry day frequency(DDF) over the Limpopo and North East Zambia regions is correlated with ENSO, while DDF over coastal northern Angola and central South Africa is correlated with SSTs in the Indian and Atlantic Oceans. The possible role played by DDF during JFM 1998 and JFM 2010 is investigated and results indicate that the distribution of DDF over southern Africa was notably different during these two seasons and may have contributed to the unexpected rainfall experienced over southern Africa.
author2 Reason, Chris
author_facet Reason, Chris
Driver, Penny Meredith
author Driver, Penny Meredith
author_sort Driver, Penny Meredith
title Rainfall variability over southern Africa
title_short Rainfall variability over southern Africa
title_full Rainfall variability over southern Africa
title_fullStr Rainfall variability over southern Africa
title_full_unstemmed Rainfall variability over southern Africa
title_sort rainfall variability over southern africa
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/12830
work_keys_str_mv AT driverpennymeredith rainfallvariabilityoversouthernafrica
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