Print Email Facebook Twitter Oceanic sources of continental precipitation and the correlation with sea surface temperature Title Oceanic sources of continental precipitation and the correlation with sea surface temperature Author Van der Ent, R.J. Savenije, H.H.G. Faculty Civil Engineering and Geosciences Department Water Management Date 2013-07-08 Abstract Identifying the sources of continental precipitation has received increasing attention in recent years. With the use of various numerical methods, sources of precipitation have been identified from local to global scales. In this paper we identify the oceanic sources based on an atmospheric backtracking analysis of continental precipitation. We find that the strongest source areas are located close to the continents. In general, we define an oceanic area as a significant source when on average more than 20% of the total evaporation, and at least 250 mm/yr of evaporation ends up as continental precipitation. We grouped these identified source areas into 15 regions and performed a forward tracking analysis of oceanic evaporation. We identified the areas on the adjacent continents that receive this oceanic moisture and whether this is nearby or remote. Moreover, we showed how the oceanic sources vary over the year in time and space. Furthermore, we correlated sea surface temperatures (SSTs) in the 15 source regions and the Niño 3.4 region with precipitation on all continents. For South America, we found that the El Niño Southern Oscillation (altering wind patterns) has a larger effect on precipitation than local SSTs. For West Africa, however, we show that SST in the source regions is strongly correlated with precipitation in the rainy season. In Australia, both local SST and the Niño 3.4 region appear to have a big influence on precipitation. As such this research provides new insight in the ocean-atmosphere-land coupling, which can be useful for studying seasonal weather predictions as well as climate change impact. Subject moisture trackingcontinental precipitationoceanic evaporationENSOsea surface temperature To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:2d570f7c-83be-4836-904d-9540acfac4fe DOI doi:.1002/wrcr.20296 Publisher American Geophysical Union Embargo date 2014-01-08 ISSN 0043-1397 Source Water Resources Research, 49 (7), 2013 Part of collection Institutional Repository Document type journal article Rights © 2013 American Geophysical Union Files PDF vanderEnt_2013.pdf 1.09 MB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:2d570f7c-83be-4836-904d-9540acfac4fe/datastream/OBJ/view