Predicting El Niño in 2014 and 2015

被引:0
|
作者
Sarah Ineson
Magdalena A. Balmaseda
Michael K. Davey
Damien Decremer
Nick J. Dunstone
Margaret Gordon
Hong-Li Ren
Adam A. Scaife
Antje Weisheimer
机构
[1] Met Office Hadley Centre,Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics
[2] European Centre for Medium- Range Weather Forecasts,Laboratory for Climate Studies & CMA
[3] University of Cambridge,NJU Joint Laboratory for Climate Prediction Studies
[4] National Climate Center,Department of Atmospheric Science
[5] China Meteorological Administration,College of Engineering
[6] School of Environmental Studies,National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS), Department of Atmospheric
[7] China University of Geoscience,undefined
[8] Mathematics and Physical Sciences,undefined
[9] University of Exeter,undefined
[10] Oceanic and Planetary Physics,undefined
[11] University of Oxford,undefined
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Early in 2014 several forecast systems were suggesting a strong 1997/98-like El Niño event for the following northern hemisphere winter 2014/15. However the eventual outcome was a modest warming. In contrast, winter 2015/16 saw one of the strongest El Niño events on record. Here we assess the ability of two operational seasonal prediction systems to forecast these events, using the forecast ensembles to try to understand the reasons underlying the very different development and outcomes for these two years. We test three hypotheses. First we find that the continuation of neutral ENSO conditions in 2014 is associated with the maintenance of the observed cold southeast Pacific sea surface temperature anomaly; secondly that, in our forecasts at least, warm west equatorial Pacific sea surface temperature anomalies do not appear to hinder El Niño development; and finally that stronger westerly wind burst activity in 2015 compared to 2014 is a key difference between the two years. Interestingly, in these years at least, this interannual variability in wind burst activity is predictable. ECMWF System 4 tends to produce more westerly wind bursts than Met Office GloSea5 and this likely contributes to the larger SST anomalies predicted in this model in both years.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] El Niño and El Niño Modoki variability based on a new ocean reanalysis
    Dongxiao Wang
    Yinghao Qin
    Xianjun Xiao
    Zuqiang Zhang
    Xiangyu Wu
    Ocean Dynamics, 2012, 62 : 1311 - 1322
  • [42] Why 1986 El Niño and 2005 La Niña evolved different from a typical El Niño and La Niña
    Mingcheng Chen
    Tim Li
    Climate Dynamics, 2018, 51 : 4309 - 4327
  • [43] What makes protracted El Niño to last longer than canonical El Niño?
    Anika Arora
    Siddharth Kumar
    Theoretical and Applied Climatology, 2019, 136 : 587 - 603
  • [44] A new perspective of the 2014/15 failed El Niño as seen from ocean salinity
    J. Chi
    Y. Du
    Y. Zhang
    X. Nie
    P. Shi
    T. Qu
    Scientific Reports, 9
  • [45] The role of off-equatorial surface temperature anomalies in the 2014 El Niño prediction
    Jieshun Zhu
    Arun Kumar
    Bohua Huang
    Magdalena A. Balmaseda
    Zeng-Zhen Hu
    Lawrence Marx
    James L. Kinter III
    Scientific Reports, 6
  • [46] Northern hemisphere tropical cyclones during the quasi-El Niño of late 2014
    A. H. Sobel
    Suzana J. Camargo
    A. G. Barnston
    M. K. Tippett
    Natural Hazards, 2016, 83 : 1717 - 1729
  • [47] The prediction on the 2015/16 El Ni?o event from the perspective of FIO-ESM
    SONG Zhenya
    SHU Qi
    BAO Ying
    YIN Xunqiang
    QIAO Fangli
    ActaOceanologicaSinica, 2015, 34 (12) : 67 - 71
  • [48] Author Correction: Global Disease Outbreaks Associated with the 2015–2016 El Niño Event
    Assaf Anyamba
    Jean-Paul Chretien
    Seth C. Britch
    Radina P. Soebiyanto
    Jennifer L. Small
    Rikke Jepsen
    Brett M. Forshey
    Jose L. Sanchez
    Ryan D. Smith
    Ryan Harris
    Compton J. Tucker
    William B. Karesh
    Kenneth J. Linthicum
    Scientific Reports, 10
  • [49] Transient ice loss in the Patagonia Icefields during the 2015–2016 El Niño event
    Demián D. Gómez
    Michael G. Bevis
    Robert Smalley
    Michael Durand
    Michael J. Willis
    Dana J. Caccamise
    Eric Kendrick
    Pedro Skvarca
    Franco S. Sobrero
    Héctor Parra
    Gino Casassa
    Scientific Reports, 12
  • [50] Distinctive role of ocean advection anomalies in the development of the extreme 2015–16 El Niño
    Esteban Abellán
    Shayne McGregor
    Matthew H. England
    Agus Santoso
    Climate Dynamics, 2018, 51 : 2191 - 2208