“…The tracking and analysis of moisture contribution to precipitation in the MLYRB from different sources will help to reveal the general characteristics of regional hydrological cycle as well as to improve our understanding of the atmospheric driving mechanisms of the heavy precipitation (Liu et al, 2020a; Wei et al, 2012). Previous studies have demonstrated that precipitation over the MLYRB was influenced by multiple circulation backgrounds, such as the phase shifts of the El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) (Li et al, 2017), the sea surface temperature (SST) variations between the tropical Western Pacific and Indian Ocean (Liu et al, 2019), the fluctuations of Northwest Pacific High (Zhang et al, 2017b), the changes of soil moisture over the Indo‐China Peninsula (Gao et al, 2020), the midlatitude atmospheric disturbances (Li et al, 2017), the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) (Liu et al, 2020b), the changes of polar vortex (Tian & Fan, 2020) and even the abnormal snow coverage over the Tibetan Plateau (Dong et al, 2019). In addition to the teleconnection analyses, studies on moisture tracking further revealed that the oceanic moisture contribution from the Arabian Sea, the Bay of Bengal and the Northwestern Pacific, as well as the terrestrial moisture contribution from the Indo‐China Peninsula and the Southern China, are all critical moisture sources forming precipitation in the MLYRB (Chen et al, 2013; Fremme & Sodemann, 2019; Wang et al, 2018).…”