In the Yingjiang area of western Yunnan, precipitation is high throughout the year, making it one of the regions with the highest annual precipitation in mainland China. Extreme rainfall in this region often triggers severe flooding, yet the key mechanism of water vapor transport underlying abnormally heavy precipitation remains unclear. This study used automatic weather station observations of precipitation, the fifth-generation atmospheric reanalysis produced by the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts, and Global Data Assimilation System (GDAS) data to analyze, for the first time, large-scale water vapor transport, precipitation mechanisms, and the primary water vapor sources and their contributions in this region. The results show the following: In the Yingjiang area, the water vapor sources at all height levels in summer are dominated by the southwest monsoon water vapor transport pathways, such as the Bay of Bengal and the Arabian Sea, with their total contributions to specific humidity and water vapor flux exceeding 70%. This indicates that low-latitude sea areas such as the Bay of Bengal and the Arabian Sea serve as key moisture source regions for Yingjiang in the global water vapor cycle. Water vapor transport over the windward slope causes strong low-level convergence and high-level divergence phenomena, and the suction effect leads to strong upward motion near the 850 hPa level. The pseudo-equivalent potential temperature isolines tilt along the mountain slope, maintaining an unstable stratification characterized by warm, humid lower layers and cold, dry upper layers, providing favorable thermal conditions for precipitation. In addition, in the summer of 2020, abnormally high southwest seasonal wind and air transport, combined with strong low-level convergence and high-level divergence of the vertical circulation structure, were key factors causing the abnormally high precipitation. This study provides an important reference for the prediction of extreme precipitation and the early warning of rainstorm disasters in the southwest monsoon region in the context of global climate change.
Luo et al. (Thu,) studied this question.