Litcius/Paper detail

The Role of the Indian Ocean in Controlling the Formation of Multiyear El Niños through Subtropical ENSO Dynamics

Yong‐Fu Lin, Jin‐Yi Yu

2023Journal of Climate17 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract This study explores the key differences between single-year (SY) and multiyear (MY) El Niño properties and examines their relative importance in causing the diverse evolution of El Niño. Using a CESM1 simulation, observation/reanalysis data, and pacemaker coupled model experiments, the study suggests that the Indian Ocean plays a crucial role in distinguishing between the two types of El Niño evolution through subtropical ENSO dynamics. These dynamics can produce MY El Niño events if the climatological northeasterly trade winds are weakened or even reversed over the subtropical Pacific when El Niño peaks. However, El Niño and the positive Indian Ocean dipole (IOD) it typically induces both strengthen the climatological northeasterly trades, preventing the subtropical Pacific dynamics from producing MY events. MY events can occur if the El Niño fails to induce a positive IOD, which is more likely when the El Niño is weak or of the central Pacific type. Additionally, this study finds that such a weak correlation between El Niño and the IOD occurs during decades when the Atlantic multidecadal oscillation (AMO) is in its positive phase. Statistical analyses and pacemaker coupled model experiments confirm that the positive AMO phase increases the likelihood of these conditions, resulting in a higher frequency of MY El Niño events.

Topics & Concepts

SubtropicsEl Niño Southern OscillationIndian Ocean DipoleClimatologyPacific oceanIndian oceanOceanographyEnvironmental scienceSubtropical ridgeAtmospheric sciencesGeologyGeographyMeteorologyBiologyEcologyPrecipitationClimate variability and modelsOceanographic and Atmospheric ProcessesMarine and coastal ecosystems