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Recent change of the global monsoon precipitation (1979-2008)

  • Bin Wang
  • , Jian Liu
  • , Hyung Jin Kim
  • , Peter J. Webster
  • , So Young Yim

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

456 Scopus citations

Abstract

The global monsoon (GM) is a defining feature of the annual variation of Earth's climate system. Quantifying and understanding the present-day monsoon precipitation change are crucial for prediction of its future and reflection of its past. Here we show that regional monsoons are coordinated not only by external solar forcing but also by internal feedback processes such as El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO). From one monsoon year (May to the next April) to the next, most continental monsoon regions, separated by vast areas of arid trade winds and deserts, vary in a cohesive manner driven by ENSO. The ENSO has tighter regulation on the northern hemisphere summer monsoon (NHSM) than on the southern hemisphere summer monsoon (SHSM). More notably, the GM precipitation (GMP) has intensified over the past three decades mainly due to the significant upward trend in NHSM. The intensification of the GMP originates primarily from an enhanced east-west thermal contrast in the Pacific Ocean, which is coupled with a rising pressure in the subtropical eastern Pacific and decreasing pressure over the Indo-Pacific warm pool. While this mechanism tends to amplify both the NHSM and SHSM, the stronger (weaker) warming trend in the NH (SH) creates a hemispheric thermal contrast, which favors intensification of the NHSM but weakens the SHSM. The enhanced Pacific zonal thermal contrast is largely a result of natural variability, whilst the enhanced hemispherical thermal contrast is likely due to anthropogenic forcing. We found that the enhanced global summer monsoon not only amplifies the annual cycle of tropical climate but also promotes directly a "wet-gets-wetter" trend pattern and indirectly a "dry-gets-drier" trend pattern through coupling with deserts and trade winds. The mechanisms recognized in this study suggest a way forward for understanding past and future changes of the GM in terms of its driven mechanisms.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1123-1135
Number of pages13
JournalClimate Dynamics
Volume39
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 2012
Externally publishedYes

Funding

This work is supported by US NSF award #AGS-1005599 (BW) and NSF-ATM 0965610 (PJW), the National Research Programs of China (Award Nos. XDA05080800, 2010CB950102, 2011CB403301 and 2010CB833404) (JL and BW), and Environment Research and Technology Development Fund (A0902) of the Japanese Ministry of the Environment (HJK). BW and HJK acknowledge support from the International Pacific Research Center which is funded jointly by JAMSTEC, NOAA, and NASA. This is publication no. 8535 of the School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology and publication no. 837 of the International Pacific Research Center.

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