Impact of southeast Indian Ocean sea surface temperature anomalies on monsoon-ENSO-dipole variability in a coupled ocean–atmosphere model

被引:1
作者
Pascal Terray
Fabrice Chauvin
Hervé Douville
机构
[1] Institut Pierre Simon Laplace (IPSL) and Université Paris 7,LOCEAN
[2] Météo-France CNRM/GMGEC/UDC,LOCEAN/IPSL
[3] Université Pierre et Marie Curie,undefined
来源
Climate Dynamics | 2007年 / 28卷
关键词
Indian Ocean; Wind Anomaly; Boreal Summer; Couple General Circulation Model; Indian Ocean Dipole Mode;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Recent studies show that SouthEast Indian Ocean (SEIO) SSTs are a highly significant precursor of transitions of the whole monsoon-El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) system during recent decades. However, the reasons for this specific interannual variability have not yet been identified unequivocally from the observations. Among these, the possibility of SEIO SST-driven variability in the monsoon-ENSO system is investigated here by inserting positive/negative SEIO temperature anomalies in the February’s restart files of a state-of-the-art coupled General Circulation Model (GCM) for 49 years of a control simulation. For each year of the control simulation, the model was then integrated for a 1-year period in fully coupled mode. These experiments show that Indian Summer Monsoon (ISM) and tropical Indian Ocean Dipole Mode (IODM) events are significantly influenced by the SEIO temperature perturbations inserted in the mixed layer of the coupled GCM several months before. A warm SEIO perturbation, inserted in late boreal winter, slowly propagates northward during the following seasons, implies enhanced ISM rainfall and finally triggers a negative IODM pattern during boreal fall in agreement with observations. A reversed evolution is simulated for a cold SEIO perturbation. It is shown that the life cycle of the simulated SEIO signal is driven by the positive wind-evaporation-SST, coastal upwelling and wind-thermocline-SST feedbacks. Further diagnosis of the sensitivity experiments suggests that stronger ISM and IODM variabilities are generated by excluding the El Niño years of the control simulation or when the initial background state in the SEIO is warmer. This finding confirms that IODM events may be triggered by multiple factors, other than ENSO, including subtropical SEIO SST anomalies. However, the ENSO mode does not react significantly to the SEIO temperature perturbation in the perturbed runs even though the simulated Pacific pattern agrees with the observations during boreal fall. These discrepancies with the observations may be linked to model biases in the Pacific and to the too strong ENSO simulated by this coupled GCM. These modeling evidences confirm that subtropical Indian Ocean SST anomalies generated by Mascarene high pulses during austral summer are a significant precursor of both ISM and IODM events occuring several months later.
引用
收藏
页码:553 / 580
页数:27
相关论文
共 192 条
  • [1] AchutaRao K(2002)Simulation of the El Niño Southern Oscillation: Results from the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Clim Dyn 19 191-209
  • [2] Sperber KR(2005a)Impact of Indian Ocean sea surface temperature on developing El Niño J Climate 18 302-319
  • [3] Annamalai H(2005b)Southwest Indian Ocean SST variability: its local effect and remote influence on Asian monsoons J Climate 18 302-319
  • [4] Xie SP(2001)Impact of the Indian Ocean dipole on the relationship between the Indian monsoon rainfall and ENSO Geophys Res Lett 28 4499-4502
  • [5] McCreary JP(2004)Individual and combined influences of ENSO and the Indian Ocean Dipole on the Indian Summer Monsoon J Clim 17 3141-3155
  • [6] Murtugudde R(2003)Response of the Indian monsoon and ENSO-monsoon teleconnection to enhanced greenhouse effect in the CNRM coupled model J Meteor Soc Japan 81 779-803
  • [7] Annamalai H(2002)Post-monsoon sea surface temperature and convection anomalies over Indian and Pacific Oceans Int J Climatol 22 559-567
  • [8] Liu P(2001)Subtropical SST dipole events in the southern Indian Ocean Geophys Res Lett 28 327-330
  • [9] Xie SP(2003)Impact of the Indian Ocean dipole on the Southern Oscillation J Meteor Soc Japan 81 169-177
  • [10] Ashok K(2005)Paramount impact of the Indian Ocean dipole on the East African short rains: a CGCM study J Climate 18 4514-4530