Litcius/Paper detail

Asian-Australian summer monsoons linkage to ENSO strengthened by global warming

Chenxi Xu, Shih‐Yu Wang, Krishna Borhara, Brendan M. Buckley, Ning Tan, Yaru Zhao, Wenling An, Masaki Sano, Takeshi Nakatsuka, Zhengtang Guo

2023npj Climate and Atmospheric Science60 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) used to affect the Asian summer monsoon (ASM) and Australian summer monsoon (AusSM) precipitation in different ways but global warming may have changed it. This study built robust annual ASM (AusSM) precipitation reconstructions during 1588–2013 (1588–1999) to examine the ENSO-monsoon relationship and how it has changed. During the period of 1588–1850 when natural climate variability was dominant, the ENSO-monsoon and inter-monsoon relationship was weak and non-stationary. Since 1850, however, both the inter-monsoon and ENSO-monsoon relationships saw an enhancement and this trend has been persistent to the present day, suggesting the influence of anthropogenic climate warming. Further analysis of climate model projections found that global warming can strengthen the ENSO-monsoon association that, subsequently, acts to synchronize the ASM and AusSM variations.

Topics & Concepts

MonsoonClimatologyEl Niño Southern OscillationPrecipitationTropical monsoon climateGlobal warmingEast Asian MonsoonMultivariate ENSO indexEnvironmental scienceClimate changeLa NiñaGeographyGeologyOceanographyMeteorologyClimate variability and modelsTree-ring climate responsesPlant Water Relations and Carbon Dynamics