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Journal ArticleDOI

Precipitation dynamics in Ecuador and northern Peru during the 1991/92 El Nino: a remote sensing perspective

Jörg Bendix
- 01 Jan 2000 - 
- Vol. 21, Iss: 3, pp 533-548
TLDR
The formation, dynamics and spatial distribution of heavy precipita- tion during the 1991/92 El Nino in Ecuador and northern Peru were examined by means of Meteosat-3 imagery, NOAA-AVHRR-based multichannel sea surface temperatures (MCSST) and additional meteorological observations as discussed by the authors.
Abstract
The formation, dynamics and spatial distribution of heavy precipita- tion during the 1991/92 El Nino in Ecuador and northern Peru were examined by means of Meteosat-3 imagery, NOAA-AVHRR-based multichannel sea surface temperatures (MCSST) and additional meteorological observations. The Convective and Stratiform Technique (CST) was used for rain retrieval by means of Meteosat IR data and a cross-correlation approach was applied to Meteosat image sequences to derive cloud motion winds (CMW) which are essential for the analysis of circulation patterns leading to severe precipitation. From an analysis of 45 days with severe precipitation it is proven that three mechanisms were responsible for the formation of heavy rains. Each mechanism reveals a specie c localized impact. (1) The most frequent mechanism (frequency of ~61%) represents an extended land-sea breeze system. During such weather conditions, predominantly locally conened precipitation patterns occured. Areas aA ected by the sea wind front during the day were the coastal plains up to the 1000m contour line on the western Andean slope. Local maxima in the frequency of cloudiness leading to precipitation could be found at isolated peaks of a lower coastal cordillera. At night the highest frequency of precipitation was found over the warm water surface of the Gulf of Guayaquil, mainly due to its coastal shape which signie cantly favours convergence of the nocturnal land breeze. (2) Convection, initiated in the coastal plain and on the western Andean slopes during the afternoon,was signie cantly intensieed by an entrainment ofremainders of cirrus shields from the Amazon basin. These cloud fragments spilled over the Andes with well-developed trades in the mid/upper troposphere which blew in the opposite direction to the daily sea/up-slope breeze. The spill over points were characterized by areas of deep convection on the western Andean slopes and were frequently valley axes perpendicular to the mountain chain as well as the Andean depression in southern Ecuador. (3) During the main El Nino phase (March- April), heavy and persistent precipitation was extended over wide areas of the coastal plain showing neither a distinct diurnal cycle nor preferential areas. Deep convection was frequently organized in mesoscale convective complexes (MCC) and was spatially correlated with MCSST > 27s . The extensive instability of the troposphere during these weather conditions was marked by convective cloud streets and an intensiecation of the meridional Hadley circulation oA the coast of southern Ecuador and Peru.

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Citations
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Potential impacts of climate change on the environmental services of humid tropical alpine regions

TL;DR: In this paper, the state of knowledge about tropical alpine environments, and an integrated assessment of the potential threats of global climate change on the major ecosystem processes is provided. But, despite their vulnerability, and the importance for regional biodiversity conservation and socio-economic development, they are among the least studied and described ecosystems in the world.
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Modeling δ18O in precipitation over the tropical Americas: 1. Interannual variability and climatic controls

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New evidence for an ENSO impact on low-latitude glaciers: Antizana 15, Andes of Ecuador, 0°28'S

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Journal ArticleDOI

Space–time rainfall variability in the Paute basin, Ecuadorian Andes

TL;DR: In this paper, the Paute River basin of southern Ecuador was used as a case study to obtain a better understanding of rainfall variability in the tropical Andes at the basin scal.
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyzed data generated from a participatory monitoring network of 25 headwater catchments covering three of the major Andean biomes (paramo, jalca and puna) and linked their hydrological responses to main types of human interventions (cultivation, afforestation and grazing).
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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