1. Prominent Impact of Re‐Occurring La Niña on Boreal Winter North Tropical Atlantic SST.
- Author
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Li, Saihua, Zhang, Wenjun, Jiang, Feng, Hu, Suqiong, and Zhang, Teng
- Subjects
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OCEAN temperature , *SPRING , *OSCILLATIONS ,LA Nina ,EL Nino - Abstract
The influence of El Niño‐Southern Oscillation (ENSO) on the North Tropical Atlantic (NTA) sea surface temperature (SST) is well‐documented in boreal spring, yet it manifests greater complexity in winter. Distinct from El Niño, La Niña has a statistically significant impact on winter NTA SST, which is primarily contributed by the re‐occurring (i.e., second and third years of multi‐year) La Niña events. Despite similar atmospheric forcing, prominent SST anomalies are observed in the NTA during the re‐occurring La Niña winters but not in the first‐year La Niña winters, mainly due to different initial states associated with previous tropical Pacific forcing. Targeted pacemaker experiments well reproduce the robust impacts of re‐occurring La Niña events on the wintertime NTA SST, highlighting the crucial impact of ENSO cycle complexity in its inter‐basin linkages. Plain Language Summary: The El Niño‐Southern Oscillation (ENSO) significantly influences the sea surface temperature (SST) in the North Tropical Atlantic (NTA), particularly as ENSO events decay during boreal spring. However, during winter when ENSO reaches its peak, the NTA SST anomalies exhibit strong uncertainty. While no marked SST anomalies are observed in the NTA during El Niño winters, prominent SST anomalies can often be found in the NTA during La Niña winters. The significant La Niña‐related SST anomalies in the NTA are primarily contributed by the second and third years of multi‐year La Niña events, rather than the first‐year La Niña events. The SST difference between the first‐year and re‐occurring La Niña winters can be attributed to the SST initial state in the NTA, which is related to the preceding forcing from the tropical Pacific. By incorporating this initial state, we can more accurately reconstruct the NTA SST anomalies during La Niña winters. Targeted pacemaker experiments corroborate the significant role of re‐occurring La Niña events in influencing wintertime NTA SST. Key Points: La Niña usually has stronger impacts on winter NTA SST than El Niño, primarily contributed by re‐occurring La Niña eventsDifferent NTA SST anomalies during the first‐year and re‐occurring La Niña can be well understood by considering the NTA initial stateTargeted pacemaker experiments confirm the important effect of re‐occurring La Niña on the NTA SST [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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