Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Ribeiro R. D., Simoes J. C., Ramirez E., Taupin Jean-Denis, Assayag E., Dani N. (2018). Accumulation rate in a tropical Andean glacier as a proxy for northern Amazon precipitation. Theoretical and Applied Climatology, 132 (1-2), p. 569-578. ISSN 0177-798X.

Titre du document
Accumulation rate in a tropical Andean glacier as a proxy for northern Amazon precipitation
Année de publication
2018
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000428241200040
Auteurs
Ribeiro R. D., Simoes J. C., Ramirez E., Taupin Jean-Denis, Assayag E., Dani N.
Source
Theoretical and Applied Climatology, 2018, 132 (1-2), p. 569-578 ISSN 0177-798X
Andean tropical glaciers have shown a clear shrinkage throughout the last few decades. However, it is unclear how this general retreat is associated with variations in rainfall patterns in the Amazon basin. To investigate this question, we compared the annual net accumulation variations in the Bolivian Cordillera Real (Andes), which is derived from an ice core from the Nevado Illimani (16A degrees 37' S, 67A degrees 46' W), covering the period 1960-1999 using the Amazonian Rainfall Index, Northern Atlantic Index (TNA), Multivariate ENSO Index (MEI), and Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO). The accumulation rate at the Nevado Illimani ice core decreased by almost 25% after 1980, from 1.02 w.eq. a(-1) (water equivalent per year) in the 1961-1981 period to 0.76 w.eq. a(-1) in the 1981-1999 period. The Northern Amazonian Rainfall (NAR) index best reflects changes in accumulation rates in the Bolivian ice core. Our proposal is based on two observations: (1) This area shows reduced rainfall associated with a more frequent and intense El Nio (during the positive phase of the MEI). The opposite (more rain) is true during La Nia phases. (2) Comparisons of the ice core record and NAR, PDO, and MEI indexes showed similar trends for the early 1980s, represented by a decrease in the accumulation rates and its standard deviations, probably indicating the same causality. The general changes observed by early 1980s coincided with the beginning of a PDO warm phase. This was followed by an increase in the Amazonian and tropical Andean precipitation from 1999, coinciding with a new PDO phase. However, this increase did not result in an expansion of the Zongo Glacier area.
Plan de classement
Sciences du milieu [021] ; Hydrologie [062]
Description Géographique
BOLIVIE ; BRESIL ; ATLANTIQUE ; AMAZONE BASSIN ; ZONE TROPICALE ; ANDES ; ZONGO GLACIER
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010072666]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010072666
Contact