Open Access
Diagnosing the 2005 Drought in Equatorial East Africa
Author(s) -
Stefan Hastenrath,
Dierk Polzin,
Charles Mutai
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
journal of climate
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.315
H-Index - 287
eISSN - 1520-0442
pISSN - 0894-8755
DOI - 10.1175/jcli4238.1
Subject(s) - westerlies , geology , equator , climatology , subsidence , precipitation , atmospheric circulation , structural basin , geography , latitude , geomorphology , meteorology , geodesy
Equatorial East Africa suffered severe drought during its 2005 “short rains,” centered on October–November. The circulation mechanisms of such precipitation anomalies are examined, using long-term upper-air and surface datasets, and based on diagnostic findings from earlier empirical investigations. The steep eastward pressure gradient is conducive to fast westerlies over the central-equatorial Indian Ocean, surface manifestation of a powerful zonal circulation cell with subsidence over East Africa, and ascending motion over Indonesia. With fast westerlies, rainfall in East Africa is deficient and they tend to be accompanied by anomalously cold waters in the northwestern and warm anomalies in the southeastern extremity of the equatorial Indian Ocean Basin, without any seesaw between these domains. In October–November 2005, pressure in the west was anomalously high, entailing a steep eastward pressure gradient along the equator, conducive to fast westerlies and, further symptomatic of the zonal circulation cell, subsidence in the west and ascending motion in the east were enhanced. Overall, the chain of causalities can be traced to anomalously high pressure in the west.