4.7 Article

Atlantic Ocean Heat Transport Influences Interannual-to-Decadal Surface Temperature Predictability in the North Atlantic Region

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLIMATE
Volume 31, Issue 17, Pages 6763-6782

Publisher

AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1175/JCLI-D-17-0734.1

Keywords

Meridional overturning circulation; Surface temperature; Climate prediction; Decadal variability

Funding

  1. International Max Planck Research School on Earth System Modelling (IMPRS-ESM), Hamburg
  2. German Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) under the MiKlip FlexForDec [01LP1519A]
  3. Cluster of Excellence CliSAP, Universitat Hamburg, through the German Science Foundation (DFG) [EXC177]
  4. Universitat Hamburg
  5. German Science Foundation

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An analysis of a three-member ensemble of initialized coupled simulations with the MPI-ESM-LR covering the period 1901-2010 shows that Atlantic northward ocean heat transport (OHT) at 50 degrees N influences surface temperature variability in the North Atlantic region for several years. Three to ten years after strong OHT phases at 50 degrees N, a characteristic pattern of sea surface temperature (SST) anomalies emerges: warm anomalies are found in the North Atlantic and cold anomalies emerge in the Gulf Stream region. This pattern originates from persistent upper-ocean heat content anomalies that originate from southward-propagating OHT anomalies in the North Atlantic. Interannual-to-decadal SST predictability of yearly initialized hindcasts is linked to this SST pattern: when ocean heat transport at 50 degrees N is strong at the initialization of a hindcast, SST anomaly correlation coefficients in the northeast Atlantic at lead years 2-9 are significantly higher than when the ocean heat transport at 50 degrees N is weak at initialization. Surface heat fluxes that mask the predictable low-frequency oceanic variability that influences SSTs in the northwest Atlantic after strong OHT phases, and in the northwest and northeast Atlantic after weak OHT phases at 50 degrees N lead to zonally asymmetrically predictable SSTs 7-9 years ahead. This study shows that the interannual-to-decadal predictability of North Atlantic SSTs depends strongly on the strength of subpolar ocean heat transport at the start of a prediction, indicating that physical mechanisms need to be taken into account for actual temperature predictions.

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