Litcius/Paper detail

Spurious North Tropical Atlantic precursors to El Niño

Wenjun Zhang, Feng Jiang, Malte F. Stuecker, Fei‐Fei Jin, Axel Timmermann

2021Nature Communications82 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO), the primary driver of year-to-year global climate variability, is known to influence the North Tropical Atlantic (NTA) sea surface temperature (SST), especially during boreal spring season. Focusing on statistical lead-lag relationships, previous studies have proposed that interannual NTA SST variability can also feed back on ENSO in a predictable manner. However, these studies did not properly account for ENSO's autocorrelation and the fact that the SST in the Atlantic and Pacific, as well as their interaction are seasonally modulated. This can lead to misinterpretations of causality and the spurious identification of Atlantic precursors for ENSO. Revisiting this issue under consideration of seasonality, time-varying ENSO frequency, and greenhouse warming, we demonstrate that the cross-correlation characteristics between NTA SST and ENSO, are consistent with a one-way Pacific to Atlantic forcing, even though the interpretation of lead-lag relationships may suggest otherwise.

Topics & Concepts

ClimatologySpurious relationshipTropical AtlanticEl Niño Southern OscillationSea surface temperatureAtlantic Equatorial modeMultivariate ENSO indexEnvironmental scienceForcing (mathematics)North Atlantic oscillationBorealLagAtlantic hurricaneLa NiñaTeleconnectionAtlantic multidecadal oscillationOceanographyGeographyGeologyTropical cycloneComputer networkArchaeologyComputer scienceMachine learningClimate variability and modelsOceanographic and Atmospheric ProcessesMarine and coastal ecosystems