4.7 Article

ENSO's Changing Influence on Temperature, Precipitation, and Wildfire in a Warming Climate

Journal

GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS
Volume 45, Issue 17, Pages 9216-9225

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2018GL079022

Keywords

ENSO; climate variability; climate change; large ensembles; teleconnections

Funding

  1. NSF [AGS-1243125]
  2. DOE [DE-SC0012711]

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On interannual to decadal time scales, the climate mode with many of the strongest societal impacts is the El Nino-Southern Oscillation (ENSO). However, quantifying ENSO's changes in a warming climate remains a formidable challenge, due to both the noise arising from internal variability and the complexity of air-sea feedbacks in the tropical Pacific Ocean. In this work, we use large (30-member) ensembles of climate simulations to show that anthropogenic climate change can produce systematic increases in ENSO teleconnection strength over many land regions, driving increased interannual variability in regional temperature extremes and wildfire frequency. As the spatial character of this intensification exhibits strong land-ocean contrasts, a causal role for land-atmosphere feedbacks is suggested. The identified increase in variance occurs in multiple model ensembles, independent of changes in sea surface temperature variance. This suggests that in addition to changes in the overall likelihoods of heat and wildfire extremes, the variability in these events may also be a robust feature of future climate. Plain Language Summary Changes in climate variability strongly affect the overall impacts of climate change. In this work, increases in the intensity of heat waves and wildfire driven by El Nino/La Nina in a business-as-usual climate scenario are identified in recently produced climate simulations spanning the 20th and 21st centuries. The intensification in temperature extremes occurs mainly over land regions and independently of changes in eastern Pacific sea surface temperature variability. It is argued that land atmosphere feedbacks are likely to play a key role in the simulated amplification, with relevance to impacts such as heat waves and wildfire frequency.

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