Title: Present-Day climate variability
1 Present-Day climate variability
- Objectives
- ENSO mode
- AO and NAO mode
- PDO
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4- Anomaly The deviation from the mean. To
calculate SST anomalies, the long-term mean for a
specific point in the ocean is subtracted from
the current value. A negative value indicates
that the current value is cooler (smaller) than
usual, while a positive value indicates that the
current value is warmer (larger) than usual. - For example
- The Nino 3.4 value for December 2003 26.9
C - The long-term mean for the Nino 3.4 region
26.5 C - Anomaly current value - mean 26.9 - 26.5
0.4
5ENSO MODE
6- South American fishermen have noticed the
appearance of warm waters in the eastern Pacific
Ocean along the coast of Ecuador and Peru. As the
phenomenon typically becomes apparent around
Christmas, the name "El Niño", or the Christ
Child was eventually used. - La Niña A cooling of the ocean surface off the
western coast of South America, occurring
periodically every 4 to 12 years and affecting
Pacific and other weather patterns.
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11- Recognizing El NiñoEl Niño can be seen in Sea
Surface Temperature in the Equatorial Pacific
Ocean -
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13ENSO
- A scientific definition of ENSO events When the
three-month running mean of the SST anomalies in
the Nino 3.4 region are greater than or equal to
0.5C, there is a good chance of an El Niño event
taking place. When the anomalies are smaller than
or equal to -0.5C, there is a good chance of a
La Niña event taking place.
14Scientists who studied El Niño
- Sir Gilbert Thomas Walker
- Credited with the discovery of El Niño
- Identified the Walker Circulation
- His findings represented invaluable steps forward
15Scientists who studied El Niño
- Dr. Klaus Wyrtki is now best known for his
- ENSO research from the 1970s to 1993.
- Developing breakthroughs in understanding and
forecasting El Niño - Establishing the tide gage network that provided
the essential oceanographic data set.
16Scientists who studied El Nino
- Jacob Bjerknes
- Took Walkers idea of El Niño one step further
and suggested that many long-term variations in
the worlds climate may be due to large-scale
interactions between the oceans and the atmosphere
17- Irregularity of ENSO
- Â (1) noise internal to either the atmosphere or
ocean - (2) inherent nonlinearity of the coupled
atmosphere/ocean system (or in the coupling
itself) - (3) changes in the external forcing
- (4) interactions between ENSO and the seasonal
cycle
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19- Seasonal Cycle and ENSO
- Â
- Is the seasonal cycle necessary for ENSO to be
realized? Not likely Many models without an
annually varying sun have proven successful at
simulating interannual variability that is
ENSO-like. -
- Is the seasonal cycle fundamental to the
irregularity in the ENSO events? Many models are
run without an annually varying sun and the ENSO
events that they produce occur irregularly. -
- However, ENSO is sufficiently tied to the
annual cycle that it is useful to think of a
canonical ENSO event, formed by compositing
observations fixed to the calendar year.
20Effect of ENSO on Climate
- In the Tropics, El Niño episodes are associated
with increased rainfall across the east-central
and eastern Pacific and with drier than normal
conditions over northern Australia, Indonesia and
the Philippines. Elsewhere, wetter than normal
conditions tend to be observed 1) during
December-February (DJF) along coastal Ecuador,
northwestern Peru, southern Brazil, central
Argentina, and equatorial eastern Africa,
212) Wetter during June-August (JJA) in the
intermountain regions of the United States and
over central Chile. Drier than normal conditions
generally observed over northern South America,
Central America and southern Africa during DJF,
and over eastern Australia during JJA.
22La Niña
23La Niña
24Flooded area in Lakeport, California as a result
of the 1998 El Nino event. (Federal Emergency
Management Agency)
25Bush fire in Australia as a result of the 1998 El
Niño event. (Photo courtesy of Fred
Hoogervirst/Panos Picture/London)
26Temperature
27Difference in maximum Snow depth in millimeters
between El Niño and La Nina and Neutral years
El Niño
EL Niño
La Niña
28The map shows typical summer precipitation
response following the onset of El Niño. The
numbers indicate the rate of precipitation
(mm/day) by which the precipitation departs from
the seasonal normal.
29- Significant impacts of ENSO on Canadian natural
resources and environment have been documented in
a variety of areas including water resources,
agriculture, forestry, fisheries, power
utilities, coastal zones and other climate
sensitive sectors of the Canadian economy. - (1) the fishery of British Columbia.
- (2) forestry
-
- Hsieh and Tang, 2001. Interannual variability
of accumulated snow in the Columbia basin,
British Columbia. Water Resources - Res. 37 1753-1760. Hsieh, W.W.,
B. Tang and E.R. Garnett, 1999. Teleconnections
between Pacific sea surface temperatures and - Canadian prairie wheat yield. Agricul.
Forest Meteorol. 96 209-217. -
-
30- During El Nino, as the sea surface temperature
(SST) is above normal off B.C., the returning
Fraser River sockeye salmon (with yearly landed
value of about 600 million) favor traveling via
the northern route of Johnstone Strait instead of
the more commonly used southern route of Juan de
Fuca Strait. Many fishermen with fishing permits
on the west coast of Vancouver Island suffered
heavy losses in 1997 as the sockeye bypassed
their area. - Other impacts occur in forestry. During El Nino,
temperatures in the BC interior, especially in
winter, are above normal and summer precipitation
is typically below normal. Mountain pine beetle
and forest fires are the two major natural
disturbance agents in interior forests. A warm
winter climate is favorable to mountain pine
beetle survival and has recently led to a severe
increase in lodgepole pine mortality. At
the same time fire risk increase under warm and
dry summer conditions.
31- 1997-1998 El Niño induced mild weather helped to
significantly reduce motor vehicle accidents on
B.C. roads. The ICBC reported that it enjoyed a
substantial economic benefit this winter. The
insurance corporation realized a saving of 3
million per day owing to the mild winter weather.
32- 2002-2003 El Nino spawned storms brought
damaging winds to southwestern B.C. in early
January. Winds gusting over 110 km/h toppled two
mobile towers, each worth about 15 million, at
the shipping docks - near Vancouver.
33- How can sea surface temperatures in the tropical
Pacific Ocean have any bearing on the weather
that occurs in northern America? - i) Atmospheric circulation
- ii) Oceanic Circulation
- iii) Atmospheric teleconnection
341) a pronounced eastward extension of the
midlatitude jet stream to the extreme eastern
Pacific, and 2) an equatorward shift of the jet
streams over the eastern Pacific. Overall, these
conditions reflect an increasing zonally uniform
distribution of both temperature and winds across
the Pacific basin, and are a major factor
affecting the winter weather patterns and storm
tracks in the middle latitudes over both North
and South America.
Atmospheric circulation
35Oceanic circulation
- The warm water propagates poleward along the west
coast of North America by coastally trapped
Kelvin waves encounters the steep Mendocino
escarpment off California (about 41N) and is
capable of propagating past the escarpment (Allen
and Hsieh 1997). Propagation north of 41N was
observed during an El-Nino (Huyer and Smith
1985).
36PNA (Pacific-North American Pattern) AO (Arctic
Oscillation) NAO (North Atlantic Oscillation)
PDO (Pacific Decadal Oscillation)
- Atmospheric Teleconnection
37How is ENSO currently detected and predicted?
- Satellites provide data on tropical rainfall,
wind, and ocean temperature patterns, as well as
changes in conditions for hurricane formation. - Ocean buoys help to monitor sea-surface and upper
ocean temperatures. - Radiosondes help to monitor global weather and
climate patterns, and to monitor and predict El
Niño and La Niña influences on U.S. weather.
High-density surface data network helps to
monitor and predict El Niño and La Niña
influences on U.S. weather. - Super computers are used to gather all of the
weather data around the world and put it into
useful formats used by scientists. They also run
sophisticated computer models to help scientists
better understand and predict El Niño and La
Niña. - An entire suite of diagnostic and prediction
tools run on high-speed computers that allow El
Niño and La Niña to be monitored in near-real
time.
38- Predictions of ENSO
- (1) statistical models
- (2) dynamical models
-
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40PNA 4 centers Hawaii(20N,160W)North Pacific
Ocean (45N 165W) Alberta (55N 115W) and the
Gulf Coast region of USA (30N 80W)
PNA
41Red, black, and blue contours on the maps
indicate positive, zero, and negative values,
respectively
42The PNA is associated with a Rossby wave pattern
with centers of action over the Pacific and over
N. America. PNA index ½ Z
(20N,160W)-Z(45N,165W)
Z(55N, 115W)-Z(30N, 85W)
43- PNA is one of the most prominent modes of
low-frequency variability in the Northern
Hemisphere extratropics. The positive phase of
the PNA pattern features above-average heights in
the vicinity of Hawaii and over the intermountain
region of North America, and below-average
heights located south of the Aleutian Islands and
over the southeastern United States.
44- The positive phase of the PNA pattern is
associated with above-average temperatures over
western Canada and the extreme western United
States, and below-average temperatures across the
south-central and southeastern U.S. The PNA tends
to have little impact on surface temperature
variability over North America during summer. The
associated precipitation anomalies include
above-average totals in the Gulf of Alaska
extending into the Pacific Northwestern United
States, and below-average totals over the upper
Midwestern United States. - Although the PNA pattern is a natural internal
mode of climate variability, it is also strongly
influenced by the El Niño/ Southern Oscillation
(ENSO) phenomenon. The positive phase of the PNA
pattern tends to be associated with Pacific warm
episodes (El Niño), and the negative phase tends
to be associated with Pacific cold episodes (La
Niña).
45AO is the dominant mode of mean-monthly sea
levelpressure variability over the Northern
Hemisphere withan out-of-phase relation between
the sea level pressure over the Arctic basin and
that at the mid-latitudes (Thompson and Wallace
1998).
AO
46 AO Index
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48- What is the NAO ?
-
- Sometimes AO is also referred to as the North
Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) due to its strong
manifestation over the Atlantic sector. - A large-scale mode of natural climate
variability having large impacts on weather and
climate in the North Atlantic region and
surrounding continents.
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51- The NAO is the dominant mode of winter climate
variability in the North Atlantic region ranging
from central North America to Europe and much
into Northern Asia. The NAO is a large scale
seesaw in atmospheric mass between the
subtropical high and the polar low. The
corresponding index varies from year to year, but
also exhibits a tendency to remain in one phase
for intervals lasting several years.
52 North Atlantic Oscillation (positive)
53- Positive NAO Index
-
- The Positive NAO index phase shows a stronger
than usual subtropical high pressure center and a
deeper than normal Icelandic low. - The increased pressure difference results in more
and stronger winter storms crossing the Atlantic
Ocean on a more northerly track. This results
in warm and wet winters in Europe and in cold and
dry winters in northern Canada and Greenland
The eastern US experiences mild and wet winter
conditions
54 NAO negative phase
55- Negative NAO Index
- The negative NAO index phase
- shows a weak subtropical high
- and a weak Icelandic low.
- The reduced pressure gradient results in fewer
and weaker winter storms crossing on a more
west-east pathway. - They bring moist air into the Mediterranean and
cold air to northern Europe - The US east coast experiences more cold air
outbreaks and hence snowy weather conditions. - Greenland, however, will have milder winter
temperatures
56- PDO (Pacific Decadal Oscillation)
- PDO is a long-term ocean fluctuation of the
Pacific Ocean. The PDO waxes and wanes
approximately every 20 to 30 years.
57Typical wintertime Sea Surface Temperature
(colors), Â Sea Level Pressure (contours) and
surface wind stress (arrows) anomaly patterns
during warm and cool phases of PDO Â
58- Fisheries scientist Steven Hare coined the term
"Pacific Decadal Oscillation" (PDO) in 1996 while
researching connections between Alaska salmon
production cycles and Pacific climate. PDO has
since been described as a long-lived El Niño-like
pattern of Pacific climate variability because
the two climate oscillations have similar spatial
climate fingerprints, but very different temporal
behavior.
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61- Percent change in mean catches of four Alaskan
salmon stocks following major PDO sign changes in
1947 and 1977. salmon stock1947 step1977 step - western Alaska sockeye - 37.2 242.2
- central Alaska sockeye -33.3 220.4
- central Alaska pink -38.3 251.9
- southeast Alaska pink -64.4 208.7
- Published in the Bulletin of the American
Meteorological Society - 78 1069-1079, 1999.