Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Friedman A. R., Bollasina M. A., Gastineau G., Khodri Myriam. (2021). Increased Amazon Basin wet-season precipitation and river discharge since the early 1990s driven by tropical Pacific variability. Environmental Research Letters, 16 (3), 034033 [11 p.]. ISSN 1748-9326.

Titre du document
Increased Amazon Basin wet-season precipitation and river discharge since the early 1990s driven by tropical Pacific variability
Année de publication
2021
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000621887000001
Auteurs
Friedman A. R., Bollasina M. A., Gastineau G., Khodri Myriam
Source
Environmental Research Letters, 2021, 16 (3), 034033 [11 p.] ISSN 1748-9326
The Amazon Basin, the largest watershed on Earth, experienced a significant increase in wet-season precipitation and high-season river discharge from the early 1990s to early 2010s. Some studies have linked the increased Amazon Basin hydrologic cycle to decadal trends of increased Pacific trade winds, eastern Pacific sea surface temperature (SST) cooling, and associated strengthening of the Pacific Walker circulation. However, it has been difficult to disentangle the role of Pacific decadal variability from the impacts of greenhouse gases and other external climate drivers over the same period. Here, we separate the contributions of external forcings from those of Pacific decadal variability by comparing two large ensembles of climate model experiments with identical radiative forcing agents but imposing different tropical Pacific wind stress. One ensemble constrains tropical Pacific wind stress to its long-term climatology, suppressing tropical Pacific decadal variability; the other ensemble imposes the observed tropical Pacific wind stress anomalies, simulating realistic tropical Pacific decadal variability. Comparing the Amazon Basin hydroclimate response in the two ensembles allows us to distinguish the contributions of external forcings common to both simulations from those related to Pacific trade wind variability. For the 1992-2012 trend, the experiments with observed tropical Pacific wind stress anomalies simulate strengthening of the Walker circulation between the Pacific and South America and sharpening of the Pacific-Atlantic interbasin SST contrast, driving increased Amazon Basin wet-season precipitation and high-season discharge. In contrast, these circulation and hydrologic intensification trends are absent in the simulations with climatological tropical Pacific wind stress. This work underscores the importance of Pacific decadal variability in driving hydrological cycle changes and modulating the hydroclimate impacts of global warming over the Amazon Basin.
Plan de classement
Sciences fondamentales / Techniques d'analyse et de recherche [020] ; Sciences du milieu [021] ; Limnologie physique / Océanographie physique [032] ; Hydrologie [062]
Description Géographique
AMAZONIE ; PACIFIQUE ; ZONE TROPICALE
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010081036]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010081036
Contact