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Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Hovmollers Of Pacific Low Latitude SST Anomalies Confirm Step Changes From ENSO

I’ve moved to WordPress.  This post can now be found at Hovmollers Of Pacific Low Latitude SST Anomalies Confirm Step Changes From ENSO
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Hovmoller graphs are used in some discussions of climate variability. Many times they’re used when illustrating surface and subsurface processes that take place during ENSO events. And for those who aren’t familiar with them, they can look like a flashback to the pop art of the 1960s.

When used for variables such as SST anomalies of two portions of the Low Latitudes of the Pacific, the Hovmollers can help to show the upward step changes that result from significant El Nino events.

EASTERN PACIFIC LOW LATITUDE SST ANOMALY HOVMOLLER

Figure 1 is a time-latitude plot of Eastern Pacific Low Latitude SST anomalies (30S to 30N, 178W-70W) from January 1982 to July 2009. The x-axis is time (same as a time-series graph), the y-axis is latitude, and SST anomalies are color coded. This Hovmoller plot is available through the NOAA Earth System Research Laboratory (ESRL) Physical Sciences Division (PSD) website linked later in this post.
http://i27.tinypic.com/2lb96e.png
Figure 1

The significant El Nino events of 1982/83, 1986/87/88 and 1997/98 stand out in red in the tropical latitudes, and the subsequent La Nina events show up in purples and blues. The lesser (secondary?) El Nino events that formed in groups after the 1986/87/88 and 1997/98 El Nino are also obvious. And for those who aren’t aware of the timing and magnitudes of ENSO events, I’ve grafted a time-series graph of NINO3.4 SST anomalies to the time-latitude plot in Figure 2.
http://i30.tinypic.com/29ws3g9.png
Figure 2

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Note 1: The NINO3.4 SST anomalies in 1993 are not classified as a full-fledged El Nino. They rose into El Nino ranges (above 0.5 deg C) but did not remain there long enough to classify it as an El Nino event.

Note 2: Refer to my post “Similarities of the Multiyear Periods Following Significant El Nino Events Since 1970” for a discussion on the El Nino events that appear to be secondary to the significant ones of 1972/73, 1986/87/88 and 1997/98.

Note 3: The notation “3RM” in the right-side of the Hovmoller title block stands for 3-month running mean.

Note 4: The coordinates used by the NOAA/ESRL/PSD for the East Pacific (178W-70W) includes all of the Gulf of Mexico, part of the Caribbean, and a small portion of the North Atlantic.

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Figure 3 is the Time-Series graph of the SST anomalies for the area of the Eastern Pacific (30S to 30N, 178W-70W) illustrated by the Hovmoller plot in Figure 1. The linear trend line shows that SST anomalies for the Low Latitudes of the Eastern Pacific have not risen over the past 29 years. If fact, there has been a very slight decline.
http://i31.tinypic.com/29ap5dc.png
Figure 3

WESTERN PACIFIC LOW LATITUDE SST ANOMALY HOVMOLLER

A Time-Series graph of the western counterpart of Pacific Low Latitude SST anomalies are shown in Figure 4. A typical description of that dataset might read, The Western Pacific Low Latitude SST anomalies (30S-30N, 120E-180E) show a great deal of annual variability. Over multiyear spans, they rose sharply from 1980 to 1999 and have declined slightly since then.
http://i30.tinypic.com/2v8guwp.png
Figure 4

A linear trend line, Figure 5, gives the dataset the appearance of a noisy constant rise in SST anomalies.
http://i25.tinypic.com/1zovs3k.png
Figure 5

But the Hovmoller of SST anomalies for the Western Pacific Low Latitudes, Figure 6, illustrates something entirely different. It clearly shows that, after the 1997/98 El Nino, SST anomalies in Western Pacific rose in one step. SST anomalies greater that 0.7 deg C (Illustrated in Red) appear very infrequently before 1998. But after 1998, SST anomalies greater that 0.7 deg C are common. The El Nino event of 1986/87/88 also caused an upward step change in Western Pacific Low Latitude SST anomalies, but it’s difficult to see since it was smaller in magnitude. The eruption of Mount Pinatubo in 1991 also lowered SST anomalies for a few years. This masks the step change in 1988 and emphasizes the rise in 1994 and 1995, which is a rebound from the drop caused by volcanic aerosols.
http://i30.tinypic.com/xpon7k.png
Figure 6

In Figure 7, a NINO3.4 SST anomalies time-series graph has been spliced to the time-latitude plot of the Western Pacific Low Latitude SST anomalies to show the timing of the ENSO events.
http://i26.tinypic.com/2dhtr0n.png
Figure 7

Figure 8 combines the time-latitude plot and time-series graph of SST anomalies for the Low Latitudes of the Western Pacific. To highlight the step changes, I’ve added average SST anomalies for the periods before and after the significant El Nino events of 1986/87/88 and 1997/98. From January 1982 to December 1987, the average SST anomalies were -0.04 deg C; from January 1988 to December 1997, they were 0.05 deg C; and from January 1998 to July 2009 the SST anomalies for the Low Latitudes of the Western Pacific were 0.34 deg C.
http://i31.tinypic.com/24o500y.png
Figure 8

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Note 5: The processes associated with significant ENSO events that caused the step changes illustrated in this post are the same as those shown in:
Can El Nino Events Explain All of the Global Warming Since 1976? – Part 1”, and
Can El Nino Events Explain All of the Global Warming Since 1976? – Part 2

Note 6: Time-latitude plots of global TLT anomalies from RSS were used to illustrate the step changes in TLT anomalies caused by the significant El Nino events of 1986/87/88 and 1997/98. Refer to:
RSS MSU TLT Time-Latitude Plots... ...Show Climate Responses That Cannot Be Easily Illustrated With Time-Series Graphs Alone”

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Figure 9 illustrates the Hovmoller graphs as downloaded from the NOAA/ESRL/PSD webpage:
http://www.cdc.noaa.gov/map/clim/sst.shtml
Specifically, this link:
http://www.cdc.noaa.gov/map/images/sst/sst.pacific.hov.gif

I took the liberty of splitting them for this post.
http://i25.tinypic.com/x45306.png
Figure 9

CLOSING

The SST anomalies of the Low Latitudes of the Eastern Pacific mimic NINO3.4 SST anomalies, and they present a slightly negative trend. But there are upward step changes in the Western Pacific Low Latitude SST anomalies caused by the El Nino events of 1986/87/88 and 1997/98, confirmed by the Hovmoller plot, and the SST anomalies for this area have a substantial positive trend. Combine the two datasets and the result is a curve, Figure 10, that clearly shows the influence of ENSO, but has a positive trend. This is the same effect the East-Indian and West Pacific Oceans, which also exhibit the ENSO-induced step changes, have on global SST anomalies.
http://i31.tinypic.com/a9kz9y.png
Figure 10

In “Evolution of El Nino-Southern Oscillation and Global Atmospheric Surface Temperatures”, Trenberth et al (2000) state in their Conclusions, “Although it is possible to use regression to eliminate THE LINEAR PORTION of the global mean temperature signal associated with ENSO, the processes that contribute regionally to the global mean differ considerably, and THE LINEAR APPROACH LIKELY LEAVES AN ENSO RESIDUAL.” [Emphasis added.]
http://www.cgd.ucar.edu/cas/papers/2000JD000298.pdf

As illustrated in this post and in those linked, that residual accounts for most if not all of the global TLT and SST warming since the late 1970s. Climate scientists attempt to attribute the residual to anthropogenic causes, when it is clearly a result of significant El Nino events.

10 comments:

John said...

I'm sorry to bother you again on this, but do we know what causes these significant El Nino events? More and more it appears that the PDO/El Nino drive climate, but what drives those two phenomenon?

Could it be human-influenced causes?

Bob Tisdale said...

John: The USGCRP report “Global Climate Change Impacts in the United States" says that ENSO is independent of outside influences, that it occurs regardless. On page 16, during a discussion Natural Influences, they wrote, “The climate changes that have occurred over the last century are not solely caused by the human and natural factors described above. In addition to these influences, there are also fluctuations in climate that occur even in the absence of changes in human activities, the Sun, or volcanoes. One example is the El Niño phenomenon, which has important influences on many aspects of regional and global climate.”

Link to report:
http://downloads.globalchange.gov/usimpacts/pdfs/climate-impacts-report.pdf

John said...

Thanks for the info - very interesting.

I don't want to peg you into a specific position, but I'd love to clarify your views - your volumnous posts make it hard sometimes.

So it's your view that the observed global warming has been driven by these naturally caused, more frequent/more powerful El Ninos? And that, hopefully, they will become less frequent/less powerful as a balance is found? That process would then lead to less future warming?

Again, I am not trying to oversimplify - just curious about your basic thoughts on the coming decades.

Thanks again for the excellent blog.

Bob Tisdale said...

John: Here's a graph of the Southern Ocean SST anomalies for the area south of the Pacific. Note the rise in it starting in the 1960s. There's a dip and then another rise in the mid 1970s.
http://i39.tinypic.com/a4wyv8.jpg

The waters from the Southern Ocean travel northward along the west coast of South America (Humboldt Current), and feed the equatorial Pacific. So I believe that is what added the fuel to the El Ninos since 1970.

Regards

John said...

Again, thanks for the reply. Very interesting chart.

I'm sure this is beyond the timeframe you have given it would likely take quite a bit of analysis, but could the content of heat passed from the Southern Ocean to the equatorial Pacific during that phase after the 1970s be quantified and compared to heat increases generated by the El Ninos?

I assume that while the individual anomalies were small (looks on the range of +.1c, when added together over decades, quite a bit of heat would have been moved up.

Similarly, has any record been kept of El Ninos from the 1870s - 1910s? Those huge spikes in the Southern Ocean should similarly have caused large El Ninos, correct?

I deeply appreciate you continuing to educate me on the oceans. I find it fascinating.

Bob Tisdale said...

John: You asked, "could the content of heat passed from the Southern Ocean to the equatorial Pacific during that phase after the 1970s be quantified and compared to heat increases generated by the El Ninos?"

Someone might be able to with the right model, but it's well beyond my capabilities.

David Stockwell said...

Good post Bob. You are aware of my manuscript here http://arxiv.org/abs/0907.1650 showing Australian temperature modelled with a single shift in 1978. It would be good to go back before the GPCS in 1967.

John, One must also consider the thread that suggests El Nino is the response of the natural system to radiative forcing, eg. http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P3-37751385.html. Kind of like, if you push a system past a threshold it starts to oscillate. Doesn't explain why El Nino has stopped though.

Ed said...

Hi Bob,

Do you have a text file of atmospheric impact from volcanic activity by chance? (Atmospheric transmission Manua Loa)

Would love to add it to my amatuer modeling attempts.

Thanks,
Ed

Bob Tisdale said...

Ed: The Sato Index (Stratospheric Aersol Optical Thickness)is commonly used for the effects of explosive volcanic eruptions.
http://data.giss.nasa.gov/modelforce/strataer/
Specifically:
http://data.giss.nasa.gov/modelforce/strataer/tau_line.txt

The Lamb Dust Veil Index goes back further in time:
http://bobtisdale.blogspot.com/2008/04/mann-et-al-weighted-dust-veil-index.html
For further information:
http://gcmd.nasa.gov/records/GCMD_CDIAC_NDP13.htm

Ed said...

Thanks Bob. You are a saint! Ed

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