el niño and the southern oscillation
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Have you heard of El Nino?
1 2 3
0% 0%
100%1. 1. Yes, and I have
a good understanding of the concept.
2. 2. No.3. 3. Yes, but I really
do not understand the concept.
Have you heard of the Southern Oscillation?
1 2 3
0% 0%
100%1. 1. Yes, and I have
a good understanding of the concept.
2. 2. No.3. 3. Yes, but I really
do not understand the concept.
Have you ever been in an El Niño?
1 2 3
0% 0%0%
1. 1. Yes.2. 2. No.3. 3. I am not sure.
Are we currently in an El Niño?
1 2 3 4
0% 0%0%0%
1. 1. No.2. 2. Yes.3. 3. I do not know.4. 4. I really do not
care.
BackgroundFirst, let’s
consider what the normal distribution of sea surface temperatures are.
BackgroundOceanic surface
temperature are largely governed by a combination of solar radiation and surface wind patterns
BackgroundSurface currents bring cool waters up along
the west coast of South America
Units: 35 0/00 means 35 parts salt out of 1000
STABLEon average
Origins of El NiñoSpanish for ‘Christ
Child’Originally used by
fishermen along the coast of Peru and Ecuador in referring to a warm ocean current appearing near Christmas and lasting a few months
El NiñoFish are less
abundant during these warm periods because there is less ‘upwelling’ of cold nutrient-rich water
Fishermen spend more time with their
families
El NiñoDuring some years,
however, the water remains especially warm and the break in the fishing season extends into May
The term ‘El Niño’ has become reserved for these extreme events
So what makes El Niño unique?During an El Niño, the trade winds weaken
This allows the warm pool of surface water in the western tropical Pacific to extend farther east, to the Peruvian coast .
Warm water suppresses upwelling of cold, nutrient rich water from below.
Occurs every 3-7 years, a result of complex air-sea interaction in tropical Pacific
So what makes El Niño unique?
Why study El Niño?Association with unusual weather patterns
that affect much of the world and persist for a season or more
Ocean surface temperatures may affect the intensity of individual extreme weather events
El Niños are becoming more frequent: the two strongest on record have occurred during the past 20 years
Why study El Niño?Since the effects of
El Nino are global in nature, the costs can be astronomical.
A large portion of the costs are often associated with fires in areas of relatively lush vegetation.
Why study El Niño?Increased oceanic surface temperatures can mean
stronger and wetter storms for some parts of the world.
El Niño’s economic impactEconomic impact
on Peruvian fishing is negative
Seabirds that feed on fish also suffer, along with other parts of the coastal ecosystem
More recent El NinosAbout two dozen El Ninos have occurred
during the past centuryMost raised the ocean temperatures along
the South American coast and in a belt extending 9,000 km westward in the South Pacific
The strongest events were 1982-83 and 1997-98 with SSTs raised by 3-4 deg C
The most recent El Niño Southern Oscillation Index (as of October 12, 2010):
http://www.cdc.noaa.gov/ENSO/
Southern Oscillation (SO)SO is a sea-saw variation of surface pressure
between western and eastern equatorial Pacific
Equatorial easterlies alternately weaken and strengthen in response to SO
Normal weather pattern in the South Pacific:Eastern region has
little precipitation because of downward motion near the high
Western region has precipitation because of upward motion near the low
DARWIN AND TAHITI
SOI = ‘Tahiti – Darwin’ pressure
SOI > 0 La Nina/typicalSOI < 0 El Nino
DarwinTahiti
Two locations: large longitude difference small latitude difference long time record
When the atmospheric pressure rises in the eastern Pacific, it falls in the western Pacific and vice-versa
Southern Oscillation is the ‘seesaw’ of pressure in the South Pacific
El Niño and the Southern Oscillation (ENSO)
Southern Oscillation index
El Nino
La Nina ‘Tahiti – Darwin’La Nina
El Nino
So how exactly does El Niño impact the weather?
The Walker Circulation
El Niño ConditionsThe easterly trade winds
weaken(or even reverse)The warm waters of the
western tropical Pacific come sloshing back to the east because the trade winds are too weak to sustain the tilted sea level
El Niño ConditionsThe warm waters of the western tropical Pacific
come sloshing back to the east because the trade winds are too weak to sustain the tilted sea level
Changes to the Walker circulation during an El Niño
El Niño ConditionsThe upwelling or
rising of the cold nutrient-rich waters off the South American coast ceases
The upward motion, clouds and precipitation moves eastward into the central and eastern Pacific
Transition from El Niño to La Niña
An animation of sea-surface height, as compared
With El Niño Nino index:
(http://www.esrl.noaa.gov/psd/people/joseph.barsugli/anim.html )
(http://www.cdc.noaa.gov/ENSO/)
El Nino has global consequencesDroughts in Australia
and IndonesiaWarm, rainy weather
in the eastern Pacific and South America
Wild Fires can be a particular problem in IndonesiaDuring wildfires during the 1997-1998 El Nino
event, over 24.1 million acres were burned
Wild Fires can be a particular problem in Indonesia
The massive forest fire in Indonesia in 1997 is estimated to have released between 0.81 and 2.57 gigatonnes of Carbon Dioxide into the atmosphere, which is between 13-40% of the annual carbon dioxide emissions from burning fossil fuels.
Wild Fires also represent a huge health hazard.
At one point, the pollution index of the region reached 839. To put a relative point to this number, a pollution index of 300 is the equivalent of smoking 20 cigarettes a day. The smoke, during one time, blanketed an area that was larger than the continental United States.
Wildfires and Drought in AustraliaAnother region
severely impacted by droughts and wildfires during an El Nino event is Australia.
The droughts have a severe impact on agriculture, mainly in the form of an inability to feed livestock.
Wildfires and Drought in AustraliaAlso, without the shrubs and pasture land, dust and
particulate matter become a significant problem.
Flooding and diseaseIn areas of flooding, water borne diseases become a
significant issue. For instance, consider cholera in Peru.
Disease and El Nino
In very humid climates, droughts may turn rivers into strings of pools, preferred breeding sites of other types of mosquito .
El Niño has a large impact on North American weather, including a reduction in Atlantic Ocean hurricane activity, because of the very strong upper-level winds that produce too much wind shear for a hurricane to continue to exist
up
below
The 1998 Ice Storm in Montreal was associated with a record-breaking El Niño
Gyakum and Roebber 2001 (Monthly Weather Review)Roebber and Gyakum 2003 (Monthly Weather Review)
Freezing rain accumulation
Effects in CaliforniaEffects in California include storm
surge and coastal erosion, as well as the possibility of floods and landslides
La NiñaOpposite to El NiñoHigher than average pressure in the eastern Pacific and
lower than average pressure in the western Pacific
La NiñaStronger than
normal easterly trade winds
Colder than normal ocean temperatures off of South America
Flooding in Australia and Indonesia
Impacts of La Niña
What are the current (animation only through November 1, 2009) conditions in the Pacific Ocean?A modest La Nina…..
http://www.esrl.noaa.gov/psd/enso/enso.current.html
Most recent sea-surface temperature anomaly (difference between actual and climate mean temperature:
Predicting El Nino
ENSO and seasonal foreacsts
It turns out, that most of the positive skill exhibited in seasonal forecasting comes from persistent sea surface temperature anomalies.
Seasonal ForecastsThe reason that we can make seasonal
predictions when we have El Nino is that the slowly varying sea-surface temperature anomalies “force” a response in the atmosphere.
In much the same way, climate models can predict changes in our climate that are “forced” by increases in carbon dioxide.
However there are “unforced” modes of atmospheric variability that are significantly harder to predict.
El Niño readingshttp://www.pmel.noaa.gov/tao/el-nino/
nino-home.htmlhttp://www4.nationalacademies.org/
opus/home.nsf/web/elnino?OpenDocument
http://www.msc-smc.ec.gc.ca/cd/brochures/elnino_e.cfm
http://www.msc-smc.ec.gc.ca/cd/brochures/lanina_e.cfm
http://www.cdc.noaa.gov/ENSO/http://sealevel.jpl.nasa.gov/gallery/
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