The role of mineral aerosols in shaping the regional climate of West Africa


Title The role of mineral aerosols in shaping the regional climate of West Africa
Publication Type Journal Article
Year of Publication 2014
Authors Marcella, M. P. & Eltahir, E. A. B.
Journal Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmoshperes
Volume 119
Start Page 1
Pagination 1-14
Date Published 05/2014
Keywords West Africa;regional climate modeling;mineral aerosols;rainfall;AOD;climate
Abstract

This article examines the role of mineral aerosols in the regional climate of West Africa. Analysis is completed by comparing two 30 year simulations using a regional climate model (RegCM3-IBIS). The two simulations are identical in structure except one includes the representation of mineral aerosols via a fully coupled radiatively interactive dust emissions and aerosol tracer model; the other simulation does not. To discern the impact of dust on West Africa’s climate, comparisons are made between the two simulations’ surface climatology as well as atmospheric dynamics. It is found that RegCM3-IBIS and its dust model perform well in simulating the temporal and spatial distributions of mineral aerosols over the Sahel and Sahara. Consistent with previous studies over the region, RegCM3-IBIS simulates high-dust loading over the region (aerosol optical depth of 0.5–1.1), which results in significant incident shortwave radiation attenuation (25–50 W/m2) and temperature cooling (0.5ıC–1.25ıC). Depending on the underlying surface brightness, the top of atmosphere net radiative forcing may be positive (bright desert surfaces) or negative (dark, vegetated surface) with important implications on surface temperature cooling. Here it is proposed that the effects of dust on West African rainfall are distinctly different across the ocean-land border and the desert border region of the Sahel/Sahara. Nevertheless, in both regions, the change in rainfall is less than 10% of the total annual values. Therefore, this work concludes that the current, observed, dust loading over West Africa does not significantly affect rainfall via changes in the radiation budget. However, it is important to note that this work does not include mineral aerosol effects on sea surface temperatures, which may be significant in influencing the results

URL http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/2012JD019394/abstract
DOI 10.1002/2012JD019394
File:
DustWestAfrica.pdf
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