Rainfall Characteristics and Regionalization in Peninsular Malaysia Based on a High Resolution Gridded Data Set
Creators
- 1. Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
- 2. School of Environmental & Natural Resource Sciences
- 3. Centre for Environment Sustainability and Water Security (IPASA)
- 4. Department of Hydraulics and Hydrology
- 5. UNESCO-IHE Institute for Water Education
- 6. UNESCO Villa La Colombella-Località di Colombella Alta
Description
Daily gridded rainfall data over Peninsular Malaysia are delineated using an objective clustering algorithm, with the objective of classifying rainfall grids into groups of homogeneous regions based on the similarity of the rainfall annual cycles. It has been demonstrated that Peninsular Malaysia can be statistically delineated into eight distinct rainfall regions. This delineation is closely associated with the topographic and geographic characteristics. The variation of rainfall over the Peninsula is generally characterized by bimodal variations with two peaks, i.e., a primary peak occurring during the autumn transitional period and a secondary peak during the spring transitional period. The east coast zones, however, showed a single peak during the northeast monsoon (NEM). The influence of NEM is stronger compared to the southwest monsoon (SWM). Significantly increasing rainfall trends at 95% confidence level are not observed in all regions during the NEM, with exception of northwest zone (R1) and coastal band of west coast interior region (R3). During SWM, most areas have become drier over the last three decades. The study identifies higher variation of mean monthly rainfall over the east coast regions, but spatially, the rainfall is uniformly distributed. For the southwestern coast and west coast regions, a larger range of coefficients of variation is mostly obtained during the NEM, and to a smaller extent during the SWM. The inland region received least rainfall in February, but showed the largest spatial variation. The relationship between rainfall and the El Nino Southern Oscillation (ENSO) was examined based on the Multivariate ENSO Index (MEI). Although the concurrent relationships between rainfall in the different regions and ENSO are generally weak with negative correlations, the rainfall shows stronger positive correlation with preceding ENSO signals with a time lag of four to eight months.
Open Access
Licence Attribution (CC BY)
Publisher Website
Access full text
Publication Details
Journal article
Persistent Identifiers
Funding
Financial Support
Universiti Teknologi Malaysia — Grant: RJ130000.7809.4F910.
Read more
References
004-828-689-230-442
Read more
Varikoden . Spatial and temporal characteristics of rain intensity in the penins...
Read more
Suhaila . Investigating the impacts of adjoining wet days on the distribution of...
Read more
Wong . Development of a gridded daily hydrometeorological data set for peninsula...
Read more
Suhaila, J., and Yusop, Z. (2016). Spatial and temporal variabilities of rainfal...
Read more
Showing first 5 of 46 references.