4.6 Article

A late 1980s shift in El Nino influence on rainfall over Uruguay during austral spring

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLIMATOLOGY
Volume 42, Issue 13, Pages 6844-6858

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/joc.7615

Keywords

El Nino-Southern Oscillation; interannual variability; interdecadal shift; rainfall; Uruguay; wave train

Funding

  1. PEDECIBA

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Before the late 1980s, the influence of ENSO on rainfall over Uruguay was relatively weak and only affected the northern portion of the country. After the late 1980s, the ENSO signal became stronger and affected both the southern and northern portions of Uruguay.
Rainfall over Uruguay is characterized by large interannual variability partially due to the influence of El Nino-Southern Oscillation (ENSO), such that El Nino (La Nina) events on average lead to increased (decreased) rainfall during austral spring (October-December) particularly in the northern portion of the country. Here we document a clear shift in the late 1980s of the influence of ENSO on rainfall over Uruguay during this season. Analyses based on observed station data and a reanalysis show that before the late 1980s ENSO influence was relatively weak and only in the northern portion of the country. After the late 1980s the ENSO signal became stronger and affected both the southern and northern portions of Uruguay. Moreover, we found that this shift was mainly related to the impact of El Nino events, not of La Nina. Before the 1980s there is a negative relationship between the magnitude of El Nino events and rainfall anomalies over Uruguay, while after this date the relationship became positive so that rainfall anomalies are largest for strong El Nino events. The change in the impact of El Nino events is traced back to distinct extratropical teleconnections. To explore this, we defined a South American Teleconnection Index (ITSA), which characterizes the geopotential height anomalies over South America that determine the positive rainfall anomalies during El Nino over Uruguay. It is shown that after the late 1980s the ITSA is well connected to ENSO, while before late 1980s ITSA is more dependent on other variability modes such as the Southern Annular Mode.

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