4.7 Article

Effects of Tropical Sea Surface Temperature Variability on Northern Hemisphere Tropical Cyclone Genesis

期刊

JOURNAL OF CLIMATE
卷 35, 期 14, 页码 4719-4739

出版社

AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1175/JCLI-D-21-0084.1

关键词

Atmosphere-ocean interaction; Tropical cyclones; Climate variability; Sea surface temperature

资金

  1. Department of Homeland Security's Coastal Resilience Center of Excellence
  2. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
  3. National Science Foundation Grant [AGS-2047721]

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This study quantifies the contributions of tropical sea surface temperature (SST) variations during the boreal warm season to the interannual-to-decadal variability in tropical cyclone genesis frequency (TCGF) over the Northern Hemisphere ocean basins. The study finds that the dominant SST modes affecting TCGF vary among different basins and are related to ENSO, GW, PMM, AMO, PDO, and AMM. These modes explain a portion of the variance in TCGF in the North Atlantic, northeast Pacific, and northwest Pacific Oceans.
This study quantifies the contributions of tropical sea surface temperature (SST) variations during the boreal warm season to the interannual-to-decadal variability in tropical cyclone genesis frequency (TCGF) over the Northern Hemisphere ocean basins. The first seven leading modes of tropical SST variability are found to affect basinwide TCGF in one or more basins, and are related to canonical El Nino-Southern Oscillation (ENSO), global warming (GW), the Pacific meridional mode (PMM), Atlantic multidecadal oscillation (AMO), Pacific decadal oscillation (PDO), and the Atlantic meridional mode (AMM). These modes account for approximately 58%, 50%, and 56% of the variance in basinwide TCGF during 1969-2018 over the North Atlantic (NA), northeast Pacific (NEP), and northwest Pacific (NWP) Oceans, respectively. The SST effect is weak on TCGF variability in the north Indian Ocean. The SST modes dominating TCGF variability differ among the basins: ENSO, the AMO, AMM, and GW are dominant for the NA; ENSO and the AMO for the NEP; and the PMM, interannual AMO, and GW for the NWP. A specific mode may have opposite effects on TCGF in different basins, particularly between the NA and NEP. Sliding-window multiple linear regression analyses show that the SST effects on basinwide TCGF are stable in time in the NA and NWP, but have strengthened since the 1990s in the NEP. The SST effects on local TC genesis and occurrence frequency are also explored, and the underlying physical mechanisms are examined by diagnosing a genesis potential index and its components.

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