inter-annual and global change Flashcards
what was the weather bomb in 2004?
Storm produced in the whole of the UK. Biggest waves in this region which affected UK. Explosive cyclogenesis: when the isobars low deepens. Intense jet stream. Weather buoys record the wave height during the storm.
what is El Nino?
an irregularly occurring and complex series of climatic changes affecting the equatorial Pacific region and beyond every few years, characterized by the appearance of unusually warm, nutrient-poor water
what triggers El Nino?
- Weakening of the trade winds
- Westerly winds burst in the western equatorial pacific
- Gives a slackening of the force piling water up in the W. Pacific
- Results in eastwards- propagating kelvin wave that initiates el Nino.
how is El Nino forced by other events?
• Volcanic eruptions; climatic records show than El Nino events follow strong volcanic events in tropics. But volcanic aerosols trigger cooling, so how does this work? In east harder to change SST due to strong upwelling and shallow steep thermocline. In west, warmer SST and deeper thermocline makes cooling easier. So faster cooling in west reduces E-W SST gradient. And via negative feedback trade winds slacken.
how do El Nino teleconnections work?
- They operate along equatorial belt. Change to walker circulation results in Knock-on effects modifying equatorial circulation cells.
- Changes location of zones of convection and zones of sinking dry air along equator.
what does PDO stand for?
pacific decadal oscillation
what are meridional teleconnections?
• Meridional teleconnections in the atmosphere: the anomalous Hadley cell convection generated from an “atmospheric bridge”
what is the connection to the stratosphere?
• There is also a connection to the stratosphere, deep convection generates atmospheric kelvin wave activity.
In the ocean: by northward propagating coastally trapper kelvin waves, also slower by rossby waves.
what is the PDO?
The pacific decadal oscillation PDO: affect on ecosystems .fisheries noticed a similarity between the envelope of el Nino and the NW pacific salmon catch
what are the 2 main characteristics distinguishing PDO from El Nino?
- 20th century PDO events persisted 20-30 years, while el Nino events persisted 6-18 months
- The climatic fingerprints of the PDO are most visible in the N pacific, while secondary signatures exist in the tropics, the opposite is true for ENSO.
what is the positive phase of the different regime of the PDO change productivity?
For california current regime: weaker winds, weaker upwelling, weaker current, lower productivity. This affects the whole food web- less phytoplankton, less zooplankton, less krill, less small fish. Less food for salmon
what is the negative phase of the different regime of the PDO change productivity?
stronger winds along coast, stronger upwelling, stronger currents, high productivity.
what is the phase of the different regime of the PDO change productivity in the Alaska current?
opposite phases, negative is worse for the salmon. Due to weaker sub artic gyre, weaker upwelling, lower productivity.
how is the PDO index calculated?
This longer period envelope of El Nino is the PDO. The PDO index is calculated by looking at temperature anomalies between NE and tropical pacific.
Comparing PDO and salmon catches show relationship between Alaska and pacific climate
what is the relationship between el nino and PDO
increased frequency of El Nino every 5-6 years
Sends PDO into warm phase. Oceanic- northward propagating coastally trapped kelvin waves. Atmospheric- el Nino is known to intensify the Aleutian low via an atmospheric bridge.