A43D-0309
Contrasting impacts of local and non-local anthropogenic aerosols detected on 20th century monsoon precipitation over West Africa and South Asia

Thursday, 17 December 2015
Poster Hall (Moscone South)
Debbie Polson1, Gabriele C Hegerl1, Massimo A Bollasina1 and Yi Ming2, (1)University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, EH9, United Kingdom, (2)Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory, Princeton, NJ, United States
Abstract:
Anthropogenic aerosols are a key driver 4 of historical changes in Summer monsoon precipition in the Northern Hemisphere. Detection and attribution studies have shown that the reduction in Northern Hemisphere precipitation over the second half of the 20th century is driven by anthropogenic aerosol emissions. Here we apply these same methods to investigate changes in the West African and South Asian monsoons and identify the source regions of the anthropogenic aerosols that drive the observed changes. Historical climate model simulations are used to derive fingerprints of aerosol forcing for different regions of the globe. Comparing model changes with observations show that the changes in West African monsoon preciptiation are driven by remote aerosol emissions from North America and Europe, while changes in South Asian monsoon precipitation are driven by local aerosol emissions.