Influence of topography on rainfall variability in Santiago Island, Cape Verde

ABSTRACT Cape Verde is a semi‐arid country conformed by a group of islands located off the west coast of Africa, with highly variable rainfall that appears during a single rainy season. Santiago Island, the biggest of the country, is characterized for abrupt changes of relief within small distances....

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of climatology 2014-03, Vol.34 (4), p.1081-1097
Hauptverfasser: Sanchez‐Moreno, Juan Francisco, Mannaerts, Chris M., Jetten, Victor
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:ABSTRACT Cape Verde is a semi‐arid country conformed by a group of islands located off the west coast of Africa, with highly variable rainfall that appears during a single rainy season. Santiago Island, the biggest of the country, is characterized for abrupt changes of relief within small distances. The influence of geographic location and topographic parameters, such as slope gradient, exposition and elevation on the variability of rainfall in Santiago Island was studied using monthly rainfall data of 30 seasons (1981 to 2010), with daily rainfall data for 14 seasons (1997 to 2010). The number of rainfall days and the percentage of maximum daily rainfall within the monthly and seasonal totals were evaluated. Few rainy days can control the monthly and seasonal rainfall patterns of Santiago Island. Multivariate linear regressions among daily, monthly and seasonal rainfall and elevation, slope gradient, aspect, and geographic east and west coordinates as predictors were carried out. Elevation explains most of the variance in the rainfall. The coefficients of determination show an inverse relationship with the rainfall depth: moderate rainfall totals (120–150 mm monthly, 250–300 mm seasonal) produced the best correlations for seasonal and monthly rainfall, while very low (350 mm for seasonal) resulted in poor correlations. Long‐term mean rainfall was interpolated using ordinary kriging and kriging with external drift. In Santiago Island, high and more extreme rainfall events are less influenced by elevation, while low and medium rainfall events are significantly influenced by orography, with most of the rainfall appearing on high elevations. Copyright © 2013 Royal Meteorological Society
ISSN:0899-8418
1097-0088
DOI:10.1002/joc.3747