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© IRD / Olivier Barrière Arable land denshering around Elahé, Amerindian village Wayana in French Guiana Indigo 44480  

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Africa’s monsoon challenge

Scientific newssheets

Ocean, climate, impacts, Water and soil ressources - Benin, Burkina Faso, Cape Verde, Ivory Coast, Gabon, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Nigeria, Chad, Togo

September 2009

The monsoon sets the pattern of life of 300 million West Africans. The intensity and duration of the rains it brings govern all crop cultivation and water resources – and hence food security. In a period of less than four months, from June to September, it brings the greater part of the rainfall for the whole year. However, it has lost its intensity over the past decades, plunging the Sahel into a succession of famines.

As part of the international programme AMMA1, IRD research scientists and their partners have been making long-term observations on this erratic monsoon system in order to predict the consequences. The observation system AMMA-CATCH (Couplage de l’Atmosphère Tropicale et du Cycle Hydrologique ), launched in 2002 to study the coupling between the tropical atmosphere and the hydrological cycle, has brought to the fore certain characteristics and paradoxes of the water cycle associated with the African monsoon: a significant change in the season cycle and a decrease in the number of substantial rainfall events, but an increase in surface runoff and flooding in a greener Sahel.

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Climatic variations influence the emergence of cholera in Africa

Scientific newssheets

Health, Ocean, climate, impacts - Togo, Ivory Coast, Ghana, Benin, Nigeria, Bangladesh

July 2007

Cholera is an acute intestinal infection caused by the bacterium Vibrio cholerae. It is rife mainly in the tropical regions where it affects 100 000 people per year. Previous studies in Bangladesh and South America have shown the existence of a relation between climatic variations and the ...

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