Climate change along the arid coast of northern Chile
Abstract
Long-term precipitation records from the extremely arid northern coast of Chile (18 °S–30 °S) were analysed
to assess changes occurring at different time scales. Results are presented here along with a discussion on changes in the
temperature and cloudiness regimes in order to offer a more comprehensive overview of the climate evolution in this
extremely arid region. Apart from a significant influence of ENSO on the rainfall regime, characterized by a tendency for
more frequent rainfall events during El Ni˜no episodes, changes at the decadal time scale were identified in association with
the Interdecadal Pacific Oscillation (IPO). Thus, the warm IPO-phase is associated with increased precipitation, while the
opposite occurs during the cold IPO-phase. Changes occurring at the interannual and decadal time scales are superimposed
on a long-term precipitation decline during the 20th century. Apart from the intensified dryness, the temperature records
show a positive long-term trend resulting mainly from an abrupt warming in the mid-1970s, principally associated with a
marked upwards shift of the minimum daily temperature, coinciding with the change from the cold to the warm phase of
the IPO. However, the period following this step-like warming has been characterized by a persistent cooling trend, most
evident in the maximum daily temperature, which is coherent with a negative trend in the sea surface temperature over a
large oceanic region off the coast of northern Chile. In the northernmost region, this behaviour in the temperature regime
was accompanied by a strong decrease in cloudiness since the 1970s. The negative trend in rainfall and the decrease in
the total cloud cover are certainly important factors that could explain the coastal vegetation decline over the past decades
in the coastal region north of 24 °S.
General note
Artículo de publicación ISI.
Quote Item
Int. J. Climatol. 32: 1803–1814 (2011)
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