South China, located in the north of the South China Sea and at relatively low latitudes, is often influenced by warm and moist air from the sea, which is one of the regions where heavy rainfall frequently occurs. Several field campaigns were carried out during the past 40 years, and mainly focused on the mechanisms of the initiation and maintenance of heavy rainfall over South China (e.g., Huang, 1986;Luo et al., 2017;Zhang et al., 2011;Zhou, 2003). Findings from these field campaigns have greatly advanced our understanding of the dynamics and thermodynamics of heavy rainfall in South China. During the pre-summer rainy season (April-June), two types of heavy rainfall generally exist: one is near the synoptic-scale cold front [i.e., frontal heavy rainfall (FR)] established by the convergence of cold-dry-northerly airflows and warm-moist-southerly airflows (Ding, 1994;Zhao et al., 2007); the other one occurs more than 200 km ahead of the front in the warm sector [i.e., warm-sector heavy rainfall (WR)] and at coasts without obvious synoptic forcing (Huang, 1986;Lin et al., 2006).Both FR and WR can cause severe economic damage and life losses. Sometimes, heavy rainfall in South China during the pre-summer rainy season is characterized by coexisting inland frontal rainband and coastal warm-sector rainband (e.g.,