Rare ground data confirm significant warming and drying in western equatorial Africa.
Emma R BushKathryn JefferyNils BunnefeldCaroline TutinRuth MusgraveGhislain MoussavouVianet MihindouYadvinder MalhiDavid LehmannJosué Edzang NdongLoïc MakagaKatharine AbernethyPublished in: PeerJ (2020)
The Lopé long-term weather record has not previously been made public and is of high value in such a data poor region. Our results support regional analyses of climatic seasonality, long-term warming and the influences of the oceans on temperature and rainfall variability. However, warming has occurred more rapidly than the regional products suggest and while there remains much uncertainty in the wider region, rainfall has declined over the last three decades at Lopé. The association between rainfall and the Atlantic cold tongue at Lopé lends some support for the 'dry' models of climate change for the region. In the context of a rapidly warming and drying climate, urgent research is needed into the sensitivity of dry season clouds to ocean temperatures and the viability of humid evergreen forests in this dry region should the clouds disappear.