info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Central-West Argentina summer precipitation variability and atmospheric teleconnections
Fecha
2012-03Registro en:
Agosta Scarel, Eduardo Andres; Compagnucci, Rosa Hilda; Central-West Argentina summer precipitation variability and atmospheric teleconnections; American Meteorological Society; Journal Of Climate; 25; 5; 3-2012; 1657-1677
0894-8755
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Agosta Scarel, Eduardo Andres
Compagnucci, Rosa Hilda
Resumen
The interannual-to-multidecadal variability of central-west Argentina (CWA) summer (October-March) precipitation and associated tropospheric circulation are studied in the period 1900-2010. Precipitation shows significant quasi cycles with periods of about 2, 4-5, 6-8, and 16-22 yr. The quasi-bidecadal oscillation is significant from the early 1910s until the mid-1970s and is present in pressure time series over the southwestern South Atlantic. According to the lower-frequency spectral variation, a prolonged wet spell is observed from 1973 to the early 2000s. The precipitation variability shows a reversal trend since then. In that wet epoch, the regionally averaged precipitation has been increased about 24%. The lower-frequency spectral variation is attributed to the climate shift of 1976/77. From the early twentieth century until the mid-1970s, the precipitation variability is associated with barotropic quasi-stationarywave (QSW) propagation fromthe tropical southern IndianOcean and the South Pacific, generating vertical motion and moisture anomalies at middle-to-subtropical latitudes east of the Andes over southern South America. The QSW propagation could be related to anomalous convection partly induced by tropical anomalous SSTs in the western Indian Ocean (WIO). It could also be linked to another midlatitude source along the storm tracks, to the east of New Zealand. After 1976/77, the precipitation variability is associated with equatorial symmetric circulation anomalies linked to El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO)-like warmer conditions. Positive moisture anomalies are consistently observed at lower latitudes in association with inflation of the western flank of the South Atlantic anticyclone. Outside of this, the precipitation variability is unrelated to ENSO.