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The Wet and Dry Spells across India during 1951–2007

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dc.contributor.author Singh, Nityanand
dc.contributor.author Ranade, Ashwini
dc.date.accessioned 2025-10-03T11:44:38Z
dc.date.available 2025-10-03T11:44:38Z
dc.date.issued 2010
dc.identifier.citation DOI: 10.1175/2009JHM1161.1 en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://117.252.14.250:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/7724
dc.description.abstract Characteristics of wet spells (WSs) and intervening dry spells (DSs) are extremely useful for water-related sectors. The information takes on greater significance in the wake of global climate change and climate-change scenario projections. The features of 40 parameters of the rainfall time distribution as well as their extremes have been studied for two wet and dry spells for19 subregions across India using gridded daily rainfall available on 18 latitude 3 18 longitude spatial resolution for the period 1951–2007. In a low-frequency-mode, intra annual rainfall variation, WS (DS) is identified as a ‘‘continuous period with daily rainfall equal to or greater than (less than) daily mean rainfall (DMR) of climatological monsoon period over the area of interest.’’ The DMRshowssignificantspatialvariationfrom 2.6 mm day21overtheextremesoutheastpeninsula (ESEP)to 20.2 mm day21 over the southern-central west coast (SCWC). Climatologically, the number of WSs (DSs) decreases from 11 (10) over the extreme south peninsula to 4 (3) over northwestern India as a result of a decrease in tropical and oceanic influences. The total duration of WSs (DSs) decreases from 101 (173) to 45 (29) days, and the duration of individual WS(DS)from12(18)to7(11)days following similar spatial patterns. Broadly, the total rainfall of wet and dry spells, and rainfall amount and rainfall intensity of actual and extreme wet and dry spells, are high over orographic regions and low over the peninsula, Indo-Gangetic plains, and northwest dry province. The rainfall due to WSs (DSs) contributes ;68% (;17%) to the respective annual total. The start of the first wet spell is earlier (19 March) over ESEP and later (22 June) over northwestern India, and the end of the last wet spell occurs in reverse, that is, earlier (12 September) from northwestern India and later(16December)from ESEP. In recent years/decades, actual and extreme WSs are slightly shorter and their rainfall intensity higher over a majority of the subregions, whereas actual and extreme DSs are slightly(not significantly) longer and their rainfall intensity weaker. There is a tendency for the first WS to start approximately six days earlier across the country and the last WS to end approximately two days earlier, giving rise to longer duration of rainfall activities by approximately four days. However, a spatially coherent, robust, long-term trend (1951–2007) is not seen in any of the 40 WS/DS parameters examined in the present study. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher American Meteorological Society en_US
dc.subject Wet Spells en_US
dc.subject Dry Spells en_US
dc.subject India en_US
dc.title The Wet and Dry Spells across India during 1951–2007 en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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