Publication Date:
2021-03-25
Description:
Persistent drought events that cause serious damages to economy and environment are usually intensified by the feedback between land surface and atmosphere. Therefore, reasonably modeling land-atmosphere coupling is critical for skillful prediction of persistent droughts. However, most high-resolution regional climate modeling focused on the amplification effect of land-atmosphere coupling on local anticyclonic circulation anomaly, while less attention was paid to the non-local influence through altering large-scale atmospheric circulation. Here we investigate how the antecedent land-atmosphere coupling over the area south to Lake Baikal (ASLB) influences the drought events occurred over its downstream region (Northeast China; NEC) by using Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) model and linear baroclinic model (LBM). When the ASLB is artificially forced to be wet in the WRF simulations during March-May, the surface sensible heating is weakened and results in a cooling anomaly in low level atmosphere during May-July. Consequently, the anticyclonic circulation anomalies over ASLB and NEC are weakened, and the severity of NEC drought during May-July cannot be captured due to the upstream wetting in March-May. In the LBM experiments, idealized atmospheric heating anomaly that mimics the diabatic heating associated with surface wetness is imposed over ASLB, and the quasi-steady response pattern of 500-hPa geopotential height to the upstream wetting is highly consistent with that in the WRF simulation. In addition, the lower level heating instead of the upper level cooling makes a major contribution to the high pressure anomaly over NEC. This study implies the critical role of modeling upstream land-atmosphere coupling in capturing downstream persistent droughts.
Print ISSN:
0894-8755
Electronic ISSN:
1520-0442
Topics:
Geography
,
Geosciences
,
Physics