About this Research Topic
The markedly non-uniform distribution of land and ocean areas in this region may be expected to have a large influence on the meteorology of the tropics. Between the Western Pacific Ocean and the Indian Ocean, the tropical land area is composed of multitude of islands of various sizes.
As with all Earth climates, the most basic control is the energy balance. Within the tropics, although varying slightly with the seasons, intensity of solar radiation is high all year and there is very little variation in the length of the day from one part of the year to the next.
Given these characteristics, it is not surprising that rainfall rather than temperature determines the seasons and it is the amount and timing of rainfall that form the chief criterion for distinguishing the various climates. The largest portion of tropical environments has a marked seasonal regime of rainfall that governs the biological productivity of the system. The remaining areas are deserts, where rainfall is incidental throughout the year. It is, in fact, the seasonal moisture pattern that distinguishes the major tropical environments – the rain forest, the savannas, and the desert – from each other.
In this Research Topic we welcome contribution of original research articles, review articles, and methodological advances in tropical climate and variability.
Potential topics include:
- The Quasi-biennial Oscillation and tropical climate variations;
- Tropical influences: surface climate;
- Tropical influences: ozone and aerossol;
- Tropical influences: tropical cyclones;
- Interactions of the Tropical Oceans;
- A dipole mode in the tropical Oceans;
- Tropical Pacific/Atlantic/Indian Ocean interactions at multi-decadal time scales;
- Climate change and tropical glaciers: Past, present and future;
- Ocean circulation and climate during the past 12000 years;
- Holocene climate variability over tropics.
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.