SUMMARYCloud-free brightness temperatures from satellite are used to interpret changes in the state of the land surface energy balance from day to day across the tropical semi-arid region of North Africa. The method provides an assessment of the spatial and temporal patterns in the surface characteristics. The variability in brightness temperature is closely linked to precipitation, as inferred from available rain-gauge data and satellite cold-cloud imagery. Temperatures drop sharply after rainfall, and increase gradually in subsequent days consistent with surface drying. The analysis shows that surface temperatures (and therefore fluxes) are well-organized at the synoptic scale, and can be linked to the westward propagation of mesoscale convective systems and African easterly waves (AEWs).The modulation of rainfall and cloud cover by weather systems is a key element in producing variability in surface fluxes of heat and moisture. To examine the relationships between surface variability and the atmosphere, a composite of anomalously warm (and dry) surface conditions with spatial coherence over a given longitude band is constructed from satellite data covering a single wet season. Operational analyses are used to examine atmospheric anomalies associated with these composited 'hotspots'. Surface moisture variations on the scale of several hundred km and larger can generate anomalous heat-lows during the day and, according to the operational analyses, generate cyclonic vorticity overnight. These vortices appear to be responsible for the observed modulation of cold cloud in the vicinity of the hotspot, and may influence the characteristics of AEWs in the Northern Sahel. Furthermore, theoretical ideas suggest that surface hotspots are likely to trigger a westward-propagating Rossbywave response; this process is demonstrated here in a simple numerical model.