scholarly journals Response of O<sub>2</sub> and pH to ENSO in the California Current System in a high resolution global climate model

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giuliana Turi ◽  
Michael Alexander ◽  
Nicole S. Lovenduski ◽  
Antonietta Capotondi ◽  
James Scott ◽  
...  

Abstract. We use a novel, high-resolution global climate model (GFDL-ESM2.6) to investigate the influence of warm and cold El Niño/Southern Oscillation (ENSO) events on the physics and biogeochemistry of the California Current System (CalCS). We focus on the effect of ENSO on variations in the O2 concentration and the pH of the coastal waters of the CalCS. An assessment of the CalCS response to six El Niño and seven La Niña events in ESM2.6 reveals significant variations in the response between events. However, these variations overlay a consistent physical and biogeochemical (O2 and pH) response in the composite mean. Focusing on the mean response, our results demonstrate that O2 and pH are affected rather differently in the euphotic zone above ~100 m. The strongest O2 response reaches up to several 100 km offshore, whereas the pH signal occurs only within a ~100 km-wide band along the coast. By splitting the changes in O2 and pH into individual physical and biogeochemical components that are affected by ENSO variability, we found that O2 variability in the surface ocean is primarily driven by changes in surface temperature that affect the O2 solubility. In contrast, surface pH changes are predominantly driven by changes in dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC), which in turn is affected by upwelling, explaining the confined nature of the pH signal close to the coast. Below ~100 m, we find conditions with anomalously low O2 and pH, and by extension also anomalously low aragonite saturation, during La Niña. This result is consistent with findings from previous studies and highlights the stress that the CalCS ecosystem could periodically undergo in addition to impacts due to climate change.

Ocean Science ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 69-86 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giuliana Turi ◽  
Michael Alexander ◽  
Nicole S. Lovenduski ◽  
Antonietta Capotondi ◽  
James Scott ◽  
...  

Abstract. Coastal upwelling systems, such as the California Current System (CalCS), naturally experience a wide range of O2 concentrations and pH values due to the seasonality of upwelling. Nonetheless, changes in the El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) have been shown to measurably affect the biogeochemical and physical properties of coastal upwelling regions. In this study, we use a novel, high-resolution global climate model (GFDL-ESM2.6) to investigate the influence of warm and cold ENSO events on variations in the O2 concentration and the pH of the CalCS coastal waters. An assessment of the CalCS response to six El Niño and seven La Niña events in ESM2.6 reveals significant variations in the response between events. However, these variations overlay a consistent physical and biogeochemical (O2 and pH) response in the composite mean. Focusing on the mean response, our results demonstrate that O2 and pH are affected rather differently in the euphotic zone above ∼ 100 m. The strongest O2 response reaches up to several hundreds of kilometers offshore, whereas the pH signal occurs only within a ∼ 100 km wide band along the coast. By splitting the changes in O2 and pH into individual physical and biogeochemical components that are affected by ENSO variability, we found that O2 variability in the surface ocean is primarily driven by changes in surface temperature that affect the O2 solubility. In contrast, surface pH changes are predominantly driven by changes in dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC), which in turn is affected by upwelling, explaining the confined nature of the pH signal close to the coast. Below ∼ 100 m, we find conditions with anomalously low O2 and pH, and by extension also anomalously low aragonite saturation, during La Niña. This result is consistent with findings from previous studies and highlights the stress that the CalCS ecosystem could periodically undergo in addition to impacts due to climate change.


2019 ◽  
Vol 142 ◽  
pp. 101439 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nathalí Cordero-Quirós ◽  
Arthur J. Miller ◽  
Aneesh C. Subramanian ◽  
Jessica Y. Luo ◽  
Antonietta Capotondi

2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul C. Rivera

An alternative physical mechanism is proposed to describe the occurrence of the episodic El Nino Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and La Nina climatic phenomena. This is based on the earthquake-perturbed obliquity change (EPOCH) model previously discovered as a major cause of the global climate change problem. Massive quakes impart a very strong oceanic force that can move the moon which in turn pulls the earth’s axis and change the planetary obliquity. Analysis of the annual geomagnetic north-pole shift and global seismic data revealed this previously undiscovered force. Using a higher obliquity in the global climate model EdGCM and constant greenhouse gas forcing showed that the seismic-induced polar motion and associated enhanced obliquity could be the major mechanism governing the mysterious climate anomalies attributed to El Nino and La Nina cycles.


2019 ◽  
Vol 124 (10) ◽  
pp. 6886-6903 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laura E. Lilly ◽  
Uwe Send ◽  
Matthias Lankhorst ◽  
Todd R. Martz ◽  
Richard A. Feely ◽  
...  

2007 ◽  
Vol 20 (14) ◽  
pp. 3580-3601 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yonghua Chen ◽  
Anthony D. Del Genio ◽  
Junye Chen

Abstract Aspects of the tropical atmospheric response to El Niño related to the global energy and water cycle are examined using satellite retrievals from the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission and the Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer-E and simulations from the Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS) general circulation model (GCM). The El Niño signal is extracted from climate fields using a linear cross-correlation technique that captures local and remote in-phase and lagged responses. Passive microwave and radar precipitation anomalies for the 1997/98 and 2002/03 El Niños and the intervening La Niña are highly correlated, but anomalies in stratiform–convective rainfall partitioning in the two datasets are not. The GISS GCM produces too much rainfall in general over ocean and too little over land. Its atmospheric response to El Niño is weaker and decays a season too early. Underestimated stratiform rainfall fraction (SRF) and convective downdraft mass flux in the GISS GCM and excessive shallow convective and low stratiform cloud result in latent heating that peaks at lower altitudes than inferred from the data. The GISS GCM also underestimates the column water vapor content throughout the Tropics, which causes it to overestimate outgoing longwave radiation. The response of both quantities to interannual Hadley circulation anomalies is too weak. The GISS GCM’s Walker circulation also exhibits a weak remote response to El Niño, especially over the Maritime Continent and western Indian Ocean. This appears to be a consequence of weak static stability due to the model’s lack of upper-level stratiform anvil heating, excessive low-level heating, and excessive dissipation due to cumulus momentum mixing. Our results suggest that parameterizations of mesoscale updrafts, convective downdrafts, and cumulus-scale pressure gradient effects on momentum transport are keys to a reasonable GISS GCM simulation of tropical interannual variability.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document