Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Chagnaud G., Panthot G., Vischel T., Lebel Thierry. (2023). Capturing and attributing the rainfall regime intensification in the West African Sahel with CMIP6 models. Journal of Climate, 36 (6), p. 1823-1843. ISSN 0894-8755.

Titre du document
Capturing and attributing the rainfall regime intensification in the West African Sahel with CMIP6 models
Année de publication
2023
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000934179800001
Auteurs
Chagnaud G., Panthot G., Vischel T., Lebel Thierry
Source
Journal of Climate, 2023, 36 (6), p. 1823-1843 ISSN 0894-8755
Rainfall in the Sahel is extremely variable on daily to multidecadal time scales, challenging climate models to realistically simulate its past and future evolution and questioning their relevance for defining suitable climate change adaptation strategies. Improving confidence in climate models may be achieved by (i) evaluating their capacity for repro-ducing observed climatic evolution and (ii) attributing these evolutions. Moreover, there is a need to consider relevant cli-matic indicators, from an end-user point of view. Fully coupled (CMIP6-AOGCM) models with idealized detection and attribution forcings (DAMIP) as well as atmosphere-only simulations (AMIP) are used to investigate the respective roles of external forcing factors and internal climate variability in the observed intensification of the Sahelian rainfall regime. We show that CMIP6 models contain signs of the intensification of the rainfall regime as detected over the past 35 years from a regional daily observations network. Both the increase in intensity and occurrence of wet days, as well as that of ex-treme daily rainfall, are remarkably well reproduced by historical simulations incorporating anthropogenic forcing factors, with anthropogenic aerosols contributing the largest share of this trend. Though more strongly affected by model structure uncertainty, the greenhouse gas forcing also displays noticeably robust features. Models are shown to fail at simulating the observed dry extreme evolution. These findings give incentive for further investigating the underlying physical mechanisms that drive the Sahelian rainfall regime evolution at regional to subregional scales. Furthermore, future hydroclimatic trajec-tories in the Sahel should be explored, though particular caution is required as to which rainfall indicator to consider. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: The rainfall regime at a particular location is crucial to human and ecosystem liveli-hoods. Changes in rainfall regime characteristics on multidecadal time scales result from both the effects of external forcing factors on the climate and of its internal variability, with this latter aspect becoming more prominent on small spatial scales. In this study, several state-of-the-art climate simulations are used to document the rainfall regime evolu-tion of the past 65 years in the Sahel, in terms of amplitude, timing, and causes. It is shown that large-scale anthropo-genic factors have a substantial imprint, modulated to some extent by internal variability. These findings demonstrate that coarse-resolution climate models are a well-suited tool to investigate the recent intensification of rainfall in the Sahel, and may provide valuable information for climate change adaptation planning.
Plan de classement
Sciences fondamentales / Techniques d'analyse et de recherche [020] ; Sciences du milieu [021]
Description Géographique
afrique de l'ouest ; sahel
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010087000]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010087000
Contact