Publication Date
1 July 2018
The Influence of ENSO Flavors on Western North Pacific Tropical Cyclone Activity
The El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) is a major source of seasonal western North Pacific (WNP) tropical cyclone (TC) predictability. However, the spatial characteristics of ENSO have changed in recent decades, from warming more typically in the eastern equatorial Pacific during canonical/Cold Tongue El Niño, to warming more typically in the central equatorial Pacific during non-canonical/Warm Pool El Niño. We investigated the response in basin-wide WNP TC activity and spatial clustering of TC tracks to the location and magnitude of El Niño using observations, TC-permitting tropical channel model simulations, and a TC track clustering methodology. We found that simulated Western North Pacific TC activity, including accumulated cyclone energy (ACE) and number of typhoons and intense typhoons, is more effectively enhanced by sea-surface temperature warming of the central, compared to the eastern, equatorial Pacific. El Niño also considerably influenced simulated TC tracks regionally, with a decrease in TCs that were generated near the Asian continent, and an increase in clusters that were dominated by TC genesis in the southeastern WNP. This response corresponds with the spatial pattern of reduced vertical wind shear and is most effectively driven by central Pacific SST warming. Finally, internal atmospheric variability generated a substantial range in the simulated season total ACE (+/- 25% of the median). However, extremely active WNP seasons were linked with El Niño, rather than internal atmospheric variability, in both observations and climate model simulations.
“The Influence Of Enso Flavors On Western North Pacific Tropical Cyclone Activity”. 2018. Journal Of Climate. doi:10.1175/jcli-d-17-0678.1.
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