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Seasonally Evolving Trends Explain the North‐South Dipole Pattern Observed in Tibetan Plateau Precipitation

Jieru Ma, Hong‐Li Ren, Ming Cai, Jianping Huang

2023Geophysical Research Letters14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The Tibetan Plateau (TP) precipitation is experiencing the north‐south dipole tendency pattern since 1979. In this study, we identify four primary seasonally evolving patterns (SEPs) that explain approximately 50% of the total variance in precipitation variability over the TP. These SEPs contribute 60%–90% of the spatial mean amplitude of precipitation trends across seasons. In particular, the second SEP that features a north‐south dipole pattern dominates the annual mean trend of the precipitation over the TP. The interdecadal variability of the seasonally evolving north‐south dipole pattern is linked to the interdecadal variations of summer Silk Road Pattern and Indian monsoon. These findings suggest that the climate variability expressed through SEPs could potentially serve as a significant source for the interdecadal rainfall prediction.

Topics & Concepts

PrecipitationClimatologyPlateau (mathematics)MonsoonCommon spatial patternSpatial ecologyEnvironmental scienceGeologyGeographyMeteorologyEcologyMathematical analysisBiologyMathematicsClimate variability and modelsCryospheric studies and observationsMeteorological Phenomena and Simulations
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