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Higher frequency of Central Pacific El Niño events in recent decades relative to past centuries

Nature geoscience, 2019-06, Vol.12 (6), p.450-455 [Peer Reviewed Journal]

The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited 2019. ;ISSN: 1752-0894 ;EISSN: 1752-0908 ;DOI: 10.1038/s41561-019-0353-3

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  • Title:
    Higher frequency of Central Pacific El Niño events in recent decades relative to past centuries
  • Author: Freund, Mandy B ; Henley, Benjamin J ; Karoly, David J ; McGregor, Helen V ; Abram, Nerilie J ; Dommenget Dietmar
  • Subjects: Anomalies ; Centuries ; Climate change ; El Nino ; El Nino events ; El Nino phenomena ; Evolution ; Ocean currents ; Ocean warming ; Precipitation ; Precipitation anomalies ; Sea surface ; Sea surface temperature ; Sea surface temperature anomalies ; Surface temperature ; Temperature anomalies ; Tropical climate
  • Is Part Of: Nature geoscience, 2019-06, Vol.12 (6), p.450-455
  • Description: El Niño events differ substantially in their spatial pattern and intensity. Canonical Eastern Pacific El Niño events have sea surface temperature anomalies that are strongest in the far eastern equatorial Pacific, whereas peak ocean warming occurs further west during Central Pacific El Niño events. The event types differ in their impacts on the location and intensity of temperature and precipitation anomalies globally. Evidence is emerging that Central Pacific El Niño events have become more common, a trend that is projected by some studies to continue with ongoing climate change. Here we identify spatial and temporal patterns in observed sea surface temperatures that distinguish the evolution of Eastern and Central Pacific El Niño events in the tropical Pacific. We show that these patterns are recorded by a network of 27 seasonally resolved coral records, which we then use to reconstruct Central and Eastern Pacific El Niño activity for the past four centuries. We find a simultaneous increase in Central Pacific events and a decrease in Eastern Pacific events since the late twentieth century that leads to a ratio of Central to Eastern Pacific events that is unusual in a multicentury context. Compared to the past four centuries, the most recent 30 year period includes fewer, but more intense, Eastern Pacific El Niño events.Compared to the past few centuries, Central Pacific El Niño events have become more frequent, whereas the number of Eastern Pacific events has declined in the most recent decades, according to reconstructions from a network of seasonally resolved coral records.
  • Publisher: London: Nature Publishing Group
  • Language: English
  • Identifier: ISSN: 1752-0894
    EISSN: 1752-0908
    DOI: 10.1038/s41561-019-0353-3
  • Source: ProQuest Central

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