Indian Ocean
A new study,
co-funded by NASA, has identified a link between a warming Indian Ocean and
less rainfall in eastern and southern Africa. Computer models and
observations show a decline in rainfall, with implications for the region's
food security.
Rainfall in eastern Africa during the rainy season, which runs from
March through May, has declined about 15 percent since the 1980s, according
to records from ground stations and satellites. Statistical analyses show
that this decline is due to irregularities in the transport of moisture
between the ocean and land, brought about by rising Indian Ocean
temperatures, according to research published today in Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences. This interdisciplinary study was organized to
support U.S. Agency for International Development's Famine Early Warning
Systems Network.
"The last 10 to 15 years have seen particularly dangerous declines in
rainfall in sensitive ecosystems in East Africa, such as Somalia and
eastern Ethiopia," said Molly Brown of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center,
Greenbelt, Md., a co-author of the study. "We wanted to know if the trend
would continue or if it would start getting wetter."
To find out, the team analyzed historical seasonal rainfall data over
the Indian Ocean and the eastern seaboard of Africa from 1950 to 2005. The
NASA Global Precipitation Climatology Project's rainfall dataset provided a
series of data covering both the land and the oceans. They found that
declines in rainfall in Ethiopia, Kenya, Tanzania, Zambia, Malawi and
Zimbabwe were linked to increases in rainfall over the ocean.
The team used computer models that describe the atmosphere and
historical climate data to identify and validate the source of this link.
Lead author Chris Funk of the University of California, Santa Barbara, and
colleagues showed that the movement of moisture onshore was disrupted by
increased rainfall over the ocean.
Funk and colleagues used a computer model from the National Center for
Atmospheric Research to confirm their findings. The combination of evidence
from models and historical data strongly suggest that human-caused warming
of the Indian Ocean leads to an increase of rainfall over the ocean, which
in turn adds energy to the atmosphere. Models showed that indeed, the added
energy could create a weather pattern that reduces the flow of moisture
onshore and bring dry air down over the African continent, reducing
rainfall.
Next, the team investigated whether or not the decline in rainfall over
eastern Africa would continue. Under guidance from researchers at USGS,
which co-funded the study, the team looked at 11 climate models to simulate
rainfall changes in the future. Ten of the 11 models agreed that through
2050, rainfall over the Indian Ocean would continue to increase - depriving
Africa's eastern seaboard of rainfall.
"We can be quite certain that the decline in rainfall has been
substantial and will continue to be," Funk said. "This 15 percent decrease
every 20-25 years is likely to continue."
The trend toward dryer rainy seasons in eastern and southern Africa
directly impacts agricultural productivity. To evaluate how potential
future rainfall scenarios and shifts in agriculture could affect
undernourishment, the team came up with a "food-balance indicator" model.
The model considers factors such as growing-season rainfall, fertilizer,
seed use, crop area and population to estimate the number of undernourished
people a region can anticipate.
Continuing along a "business as usual" scenario - with current trends
in declining rainfall and agricultural capacity continuing as it is
currently to 2030, the team found that the number of undernourished people
will increase by more than 50 percent in eastern Africa.
Still, the food-balance indicator also showed that in the face of a
continuation of the current downward trend in rainfall, even modest
increases in agricultural capacity could reduce the number of
undernourished people by 40 percent.
"A strong commitment to agricultural development by both African
nations and the international community could lead fairly quickly to a more
food-secure Africa," Funk said.
Souce: NASA