Impacts of variations in the strength and structure of El Niño events on Pacific rainfall in CMIP5 models

被引:0
|
作者
Bradley F. Murphy
Hua Ye
François Delage
机构
[1] Bureau of Meteorology,Centre for Australian Weather and Climate Research
来源
Climate Dynamics | 2015年 / 44卷
关键词
El Niño; Pacific rainfall; Climate variability; CMIP5;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) plays a dominant role in interannual climate variability in Pacific island countries, directly affecting lives there. Many countries show different rainfall responses depending on the sea surface temperature (SST) structure of different types of El Nino events. El Niño events are classified into three types based on previous studies: those with strongest SST anomalies in the eastern Pacific Cold Tongue region (CTE), in the Western Pacific Warm Pool region (WPE), and those in between, a “Mixed” El Niño (MxE), and results from 30 CMIP5 models are investigated. These models accurately reproduce observed SST and precipitation anomalies for the three El Niño types and La Niña. CMIP5 models simulate much larger ranges in the strength of ENSO events than observed. Results clarify the roles of both the different structures of El Niño SST anomalies and their magnitudes on rainfall in the Pacific, and demonstrate that each of the three El Niño types has different impacts on rainfall in the region. These impacts vary with location, with WPE and CTE producing very different impacts in most Pacific island countries. There is a linear intensification of both the mean and maximum rainfall anomalies in the equatorial Pacific as the events become stronger. Equatorial rainfall shifts eastward in CTE and MxE, westward in La Niña. Both the South Pacific and Intertropical Convergence Zones (SPCZ and ITCZ) shift equatorward in El Niño and poleward in La Niña, the shifts increasing as events strengthen. WPE show different behaviour to other events, with little east-west shift in equatorial rainfall, and the orientation angle of the convergence zones increases. Identification of models with no erroneous westward bias in SST anomalies has clarified the effect of strong CTE events producing “zonal” SPCZ and shifting rainfall away to the east from western equatorial countries.
引用
收藏
页码:3171 / 3186
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] The cloud-radiative effect when simulating strength asymmetry in two types of El Nino events using CMIP5 models
    Fang, Xiang-Hui
    Zheng, Fei
    Zhu, Jiang
    JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-OCEANS, 2015, 120 (06) : 4357 - 4369
  • [32] Understanding Bias in the Evaporative Damping of El Nino-Southern Oscillation Events in CMIP5 Models
    Ferrett, Samantha
    Collins, Matthew
    Ren, Hong-Li
    JOURNAL OF CLIMATE, 2017, 30 (16) : 6351 - 6370
  • [33] Phase-Locking of El Niño and La Niña Events in CMIP6 Models
    Yan, Yu
    Sun, De-Zheng
    ATMOSPHERE, 2024, 15 (08)
  • [34] Identification of deficiencies in seasonal rainfall simulated by CMIP5 climate models
    Dunning, Caroline M.
    Allan, Richard P.
    Black, Emily
    ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2017, 12 (11):
  • [35] Improved simulation of two types of El Nino in CMIP5 models
    Kug, Jong-Seong
    Ham, Yoo-Geun
    Lee, June-Yi
    Jin, Fei-Fei
    ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2012, 7 (03):
  • [36] Impact of Interdecadal Pacific Oscillation on Indian summer monsoon rainfall: an assessment from CMIP5 climate models
    Manish K. Joshi
    Fred Kucharski
    Climate Dynamics, 2017, 48 : 2375 - 2391
  • [37] Impact of Interdecadal Pacific Oscillation on Indian summer monsoon rainfall: an assessment from CMIP5 climate models
    Joshi, Manish K.
    Kucharski, Fred
    CLIMATE DYNAMICS, 2017, 48 (7-8) : 2375 - 2391
  • [38] Evidence of nonlinear Walker circulation feedbacks on extreme El Nino Pacific diversity: Observations and CMIP5 models
    Sulca, Juan
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLIMATOLOGY, 2021, 41 (05) : 2934 - 2961
  • [39] An investigation of CMIP5 model biases in simulating the impacts of central Pacific El Nino on the East Asian summer monsoon
    Feng, Juan
    Chen, Wen
    Gong, Hainan
    Ying, Jun
    Jiang, Wenping
    CLIMATE DYNAMICS, 2019, 52 (5-6) : 2631 - 2646
  • [40] Relative performance of CMIP5 and CMIP6 models in simulating rainfall in Peninsular Malaysia
    Pour, Sahar Hadi
    Shahid, Shamsuddin
    Mainuddin, Mohammed
    THEORETICAL AND APPLIED CLIMATOLOGY, 2022, 149 (1-2) : 709 - 725