Drivers of Low-Frequency Sahel Precipitation Variability: Comparing
CMIP5 and CMIP6 with Observations
Abstract
We examine and contrast the simulation of Sahel rainfall in phases 5 and
6 of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP5 and CMIP6). On
average, both ensembles grossly underestimate the magnitude of
low-frequency variability in Sahel rainfall. But while CMIP5 partially
matches the timing and pattern of observed multi-decadal rainfall swings
in its historical simulations, CMIP6 does not. To classify model
deficiency, we use the previously-established link between changes in
Sahelian precipitation and the North Atlantic Relative Index (NARI) for
sea surface temperature (SST) to partition all influences on Sahelian
precipitation into five components: (1) teleconnections to SST
variations; the effects of (2) atmospheric and (3) SST variability
internal to the climate system; (4) the SST response to external
radiative forcing; and (5) the “fast” response to forcing, which is
not mediated by SST. CMIP6 atmosphere-only simulations indicate that the
fast response to forcing plays only a small role relative to the
predominant effect of observed SST variability on low-frequency Sahel
precipitation variability, and that the strength of the NARI
teleconnection is consistent with observations. Applying the lessons of
atmosphere-only models to coupled settings, we imply that the failure of
coupled models in simulating 20th century Sahel rainfall derives from
their failure to simulate the observed combination of forced and
internal variability in SST. Yet differences between CMIP5 and CMIP6
Sahel precipitation do not mainly derive from differences in NARI, but
from either their fast response to forcing or the role of other SST
patterns.