Herein, we investigated the characteristics and mechanisms of interannual variability of extreme summer precipitation in northwest China (NWC). The four high-resolution precipitation predicting products under assessment indicated that both the accumulation of summer daily precipitation ≥95th percentile, and the summer maxima of daily precipitation generally decreased in a southeast—northwest direction, while relatively high values were observed in the Tienshan and Qilian Mountain areas. In turn, the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) satellite dataset underestimated extreme precipitation in mountainous areas, while Asian precipitation highly—resolved observational data integration towards evaluation (APHRODITE) and Climate Prediction Center (CPC) captured the characteristics of extreme precipitation in NWC. AMIP-type simulations of the interannual variability of extreme summer precipitation in NWC were quite unsuccessful. However, all of them can capture the increasing trends. Therefore, we further found that the interannual increase in extreme precipitation in NWC is strongly correlated with the weakened South Asian high, strengthened Western Pacific Subtropical high, the enhanced westerly jet, and the mid- to high-latitude Rossby wave trains, whose formation and sustenance can be traced back to sea surface temperature-anomalies in the western Pacific in May, June, and July. An increased sea surface temperature promotes convection and induces diabatic heating, which stimulates anticyclonic anomalies that disturb the enhanced westerly jet, resulting in a barotropic Rossby wave train via the Gill-type response. Additionally, it guides more water vapor convergence to NWC and enhances upward motion via anticyclonic anomalies over western Europe and Eastern Asia, and cyclonic anomalies over Central Asia.
The precipitation in the Qilian (QMA) and Tienshan (TMA) mountain areas is one of the main sources of subsurface and surface water in northwestern China (NWC). Based on two datasets, CN05.1 and station‐observed daily precipitation, we found that summer precipitation in 1979–2020 exhibited an increasing trend in NWC. The results of rotation empirical orthogonal function (REOF) analysis also separated the increased precipitation patterns in the QMA and TMA from the other REOF modes; the proportion of the precipitation of these areas to the total NWC summer precipitation substantially increased (0.12%⋅year−1 and 0.03%⋅year−1, respectively). According to the moisture budget, the evaporation changes in the QMA and TMA were coherently coupled with precipitation, which suggested the feedback between increasing evaporation and precipitation with the recently warming climate. The precipitation increase was larger than that of evaporation, indicating a net wetting trend in the QMA and TMA. The increase in zonal horizontal and vertical moisture advection terms contributed more to the increased precipitation in the QMA. The increase in meridional moisture advection contributed more to the increased precipitation in the TMA. We concluded comprehensive frameworks of the water vapor transport in climate change in mountain areas in NWC which aimed to contribute to the understanding of arid region hydrology.
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