4.7 Article

What Governs the Interannual Variability of Recurving North Atlantic Tropical Cyclones?

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLIMATE
Volume 35, Issue 12, Pages 3627-3641

Publisher

AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1175/JCLI-D-21-0712.1

Keywords

Extratropical transition; Hurricanes; typhoons; Tropical cyclones; Interannual variability

Funding

  1. Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) via the SCENARIO Doctoral Training Partnership [NE/S0077261/1]
  2. U.K. National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS) at the University of Reading
  3. European Commission of the Horizon 2020 research program [641727]
  4. NERC through The North Atlantic Climate System Integrated Study (ACSIS) [NE/N018044/1]

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This study investigates the interannual variability of recurving tropical cyclones (TCs) and finds that it is primarily determined by the frequency of TCs in the subtropical Atlantic and hurricanes in the main development region (MDR). The seasonal anomalies in the steering flow have a smaller impact on the frequency of recurving TCs.
Recurving tropical cyclones (TCs) can cause extensive damage along the U.S. East Coast and later in their life cycle over Europe as post-tropical cyclones. While the existing literature attempts to understand the drivers of basinwide and regional TC variability, less work has been undertaken looking at recurving TCs. The roles played by the interannual variabilities of TC frequency and the steering flow in governing recurving TC interannual variability are investigated in this study. Using a track-matching algorithm, we identify observed TC tracks from the NHC best track hurricane database, version 2 (HURDAT2) in the ERA5 and MERRA2 reanalyses. This allows for detailed analysis of the post-tropical stages of the tracks in the observational TC record, enabling robust identification and separation of TCs that recurve. We show that over 75% of the interannual variance in annual recurving TC frequency can be explained by just two predictors-the frequency of TCs forming in the subtropical Atlantic, and hurricanes (TCs with wind speeds > 33 m s(-1)) forming in the main development region (MDR). An index describing the seasonal mean meridional steering flow shows a weak, nonsignificant relationship with recurving TC frequency, supported by composite analysis. These results show that the interannual variability in recurving TC frequency is primarily driven by the seasonal TC activity of the MDR and the subtropical Atlantic, with seasonal anomalies in the steering flow playing a much smaller, secondary role. These results help to quantify the extent to which skillful seasonal forecasts of Atlantic hurricane activity benefit regions vulnerable to recurving TCs. Significance StatementRecurving tropical cyclones (TCs) can cause extensive damage to the U.S. East Coast, eastern Canada, and Europe. It is, therefore, crucial to understand why some years have a higher frequency of recurving TCs than other years. In this study, we show that the frequency of recurving TCs is very strongly linked to the frequency that hurricanes (TCs with wind speeds > 33 m s(-1)) form in the main development region, and the frequency that TCs form in the subtropical Atlantic. This result suggests that skillful seasonal prediction of hurricane activity could be used to give enhanced seasonal warning to the regions often impacted by recurving TCs.

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