Influence of Pacific Meridional Mode on ENSO evolution and predictability: Asymmetric modulation and ocean preconditioning
AbstractThis study investigates the mechanisms behind the Pacific Meridional Mode (PMM) in influencing the development of El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) event and its seasonal predictability. To examine the relative importance of various factors that may modulate the efficiency of the PMM influence, a series of experiments are conducted for selected ENSO events with different intensity using the Community Earth System Model, in which ensemble predictions are made from slightly different ocean initial states but under a common prescribed PMM surface heat flux forcing. Overall, the matched PMM forcing to ENSO, i.e., a positive (negative) PMM prior to an El Niño (a La Niña), plays an enhancing role, while a mismatched PMM forcing plays a damping role. For the matched cases, a positive PMM event enhances an El Niño more strongly than a negative PMM event enhances a La Niña. This asymmetry in influencing ENSO largely originates from the asymmetry in intensity between the positive and negative PMM events in the tropics, which can be explained by the nonlinearity in the growth and equatorward propagation of the PMM-related anomalies of sea surface temperature (SST) and surface zonal wind through both wind-evaporation-SST feedback and summer deep convection response. Our model results also indicate that the PMM acts as a modulator rather than a trigger for the occurrence of ENSO event. Furthermore, the response of ENSO to an imposed PMM forcing is modulated by the preconditioning of the upper-ocean heat content, which provides the memory for the coupled low-frequency evolution in the tropical Pacific.