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Understanding the recent increase in multiyear La Niñas

Earth Sciences

Understanding the recent increase in multiyear La Niñas

B. Wang, W. Sun, et al.

Dive into the fascinating world of La Niña events with groundbreaking research by Bin Wang, Weiyi Sun, Chunhan Jin, and their colleagues. Discover the accelerating trend of multiyear La Niña occurrences linked to warming in the western Pacific. This study reveals how rising temperatures could heighten the frequency and impact of these climatic phenomena.... show more
Abstract
Five out of six La Niña events since 1998 have lasted two to three years. Why so many long-lasting multiyear La Niña events have emerged recently and whether they will become more common remains unknown. Here we show that ten multiyear La Niña events over the past century had an accelerated trend, with eight of these occurring after 1970. The two types of multiyear La Niña events over this time period followed either a super El Niño or a central Pacific El Niño. We find that multiyear La Niña events differ from single-year La Niñas by a prominent onset rate, which is rooted in the western Pacific warming-enhanced zonal advective feedback for the central Pacific multiyear La Niña events type and thermocline feedback for the super El Niño multiyear La Niña events type. The results from large ensemble climate simulations support the observed multiyear La Niña events-western Pacific warming link. More multiyear La Niña events will exacerbate adverse socioeconomic impacts if the western Pacific continues to warm relative to the central Pacific.
Publisher
Nature Climate Change
Published On
Sep 18, 2023
Authors
Bin Wang, Weiyi Sun, Chunhan Jin, Xiao Luo, Young-Min Yang, Tim Li, Baoqiang Xiang, Michael J. McPhaden, Mark A. Cane, Feifei Jin, Fei Liu, Jian Liu
Tags
La Niña
climate trends
western Pacific warming
thermocline feedback
climate simulations
multiyear events
El Niño
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