Model simulations of rainfall over southern Africa and its eastern escarpment

Authors

  • Zane Dedekind CSIR Natural Resources and the Environment – Climate Studies, Modelling and Environmental Health, PO Box 395, Pretoria, 0001, South Africa
  • Francois A Engelbrecht 1. CSIR Natural Resources and the Environment – Climate Studies, Modelling and Environmental Health, PO Box 395, Pretoria, 0001, South Africa; 2. Unit for Environmental Sciences and Management, North-West University, Potchefstroom, 2520, South Africa
  • Jacobus van der Merwe CSIR Natural Resources and the Environment – Climate Studies, Modelling and Environmental Health, PO Box 395, Pretoria, 0001, South Africa

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.4314/wsa.v42i1.13

Keywords:

CCAM, conformal-cubic atmospheric model, inter-annual rainfall variability, model simulations, eastern escarpment

Abstract

Rainfall simulations over southern and tropical Africa in the form of low-resolution Atmospheric Model Intercomparison Project (AMIP) simulations and higher resolution National Centre for Environmental Prediction (NCEP) reanalysis downscalings are presented and evaluated in this paper. The model used is the conformal-cubic atmospheric model (CCAM), a variable-resolution global atmospheric model. The simulations are evaluated with regards to rainfall totals, spatial distribution, seasonality and inter-annual variability. Since both Global Circulation Models (GCMs) and Regional Climate Models (RCMs) are known to have relatively large biases and shortcomings in simulating rainfall over the steep eastern escarpment of southern Africa and in particular Lesotho, the paper has a focus on evaluating model performance over these regions. It is shown that in the reanalysis simulations the model realistically represents the seasonal cycle in rainfall. However, the AMIP simulations are prone to the model overestimating rainfall totals in spring. The spatial distribution of rainfall is simulated realistically; however rainfall totals are significantly overestimated over the escarpment areas of both southern Africa and East Africa. When nudged within the observed circulation patterns of the reanalysis data, the model is capable of realistically simulating inter-annual rainfall variability over the eastern parts of southern Africa.

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Published

2016-01-27

Issue

Section

Research paper

How to Cite

Zane Dedekind, Francois A Engelbrecht and Jacobus van der Merwe (2016) “Model simulations of rainfall over southern Africa and its eastern escarpment”, Water SA, 42(1 January). doi:10.4314/wsa.v42i1.13.