logo
Loading...
Earlier onset of North Atlantic hurricane season with warming oceans

Earth Sciences

Earlier onset of North Atlantic hurricane season with warming oceans

R. E. Truchelut, P. J. Klotzbach, et al.

Discover the alarming trend of earlier tropical cyclone activity in the Atlantic basin, as shown by Ryan E. Truchelut and colleagues. With significant shifts in the onset dates linked to warming oceans, this research sheds light on the changing landscape of hurricane seasons in the U.S. Don't miss out on these critical findings!... show more
Abstract
Numerous Atlantic basin tropical cyclones have recently developed prior to the official start of hurricane season, including several pre-season landfalls in the continental United States. Pre-season and early-season tropical cyclones disproportionately affect populated land-masses, often producing outsized precipitation impacts. Here we show a significant trend towards earlier onset of tropical cyclone activity in the North Atlantic basin, with threshold dates of the first three percentiles of accumulated cyclone energy shifting earlier at a rate exceeding five days decade⁻¹ since 1979, even correcting for biases in climatology due to increased detection of short-lived storms. Initial threshold dates of continental United States named storm landfalls have trended earlier by two days decade⁻¹ since 1900. The trend towards additional pre-season and early-season activity is linked to spring thermodynamic conditions becoming more conducive for tropical cyclone formation. Genesis potential index value increases in the western Atlantic basin are primarily driven by warming ocean temperatures.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Aug 16, 2022
Authors
Ryan E. Truchelut, Philip J. Klotzbach, Erica M. Staehling, Kimberly M. Wood, Daniel J. Halperin, Carl J. Schreck III, Eric S. Blake
Tags
tropical cyclones
hurricane season
North Atlantic basin
accumulated cyclone energy
ocean temperatures
thermodynamic conditions
Listen, Learn & Level Up
Over 10,000 hours of research content in 25+ fields, available in 22+ languages.
No more digging through PDFs, just hit play and absorb the world's latest research in your language, on your time.
listen to research audio papers with researchbunny