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Oscillations
in Climate Triggered by El Niño
Long before the modern science of meteorology became established,
fishermen from Peru and Ecuador who ventured into the coastal waters
west of South America knew that in late December the fish population
that provided their livelihood diminished. Because of the timing
of this event, it came to be known as El Niño, Spanish for
"the Christ child." Why did the fish vanish? Fish are near
the top of a food chain that begins with plankton, which live off
nutrients in the water. These nutrients increase when cold water
upwells from the deep along the coast of South America. During El
Niño, warm water currents flow eastward from the central Pacific,
and the cold, nutrient-rich water that supports the marine food chain
remains at depth. With less nutrients, there are less plankton, and
without the plankton, the fish migrate elsewhere to find food.
To understand why El Niño occurs, we need to look at atmospheric
flow and related surface ocean currents in the equatorial Pacific.
Normally (when El Niño is not in progress), a major equatorial
low-pressure cell exists in the western Pacific over Indonesia and
Papua New Guinea, while a high-pressure cell forms over the eastern
Pacific, along the coast of equatorial South America. This geometry
means that a large east-west convection cell exists in the troposphere
over the equatorial Pacificair rises in the western Pacific,
flows east, sinks in the eastern Pacific, and then flows west at
the surface. The easterly surface winds blow warm surface water westward,
so that it pools in the western Pacific. Cold water from the deep
ocean rises along South America, to replace the warm water that moved
west. It is this rising cold water that brings nutrients to the surface.
During El Niño, the low-pressure cells moves eastward over
the central Pacific, and a high-pressure cell develops over Indonesia;
so two convective cells develop. As a result, surface winds starts
to blow east in the western Pacific, driving warm surface water back
to South America. This warm surface water prevents deep cold water
from rising, sending the fish away. In effect, pressure cells oscillate
back and forth across the Pacific, an event now called the southern
oscillation.
El Niño gained world notoriety in late 1982 and early 1983,
when a particularly large low-pressure cell developed in the eastern
part of the Pacific, and surface water currents flowed eastward with
vigor, some spreading to the north and south of the equator; as a
result, the jet streams stayed farther north than is typical. In
effect, El Niño caused a temporary climate change worldwide.
Drought conditions persisted in the normally rainy western Pacific,
while unusually heavy rains drenched western South America. In North
America, rains swamped the southern United States and storms battered
California, winters were warmer that usual in Canada, and snowfalls
were heavier in the Sierra Nevada Mountains, leading to spring floods.
Climatologists have been working intensely to understand the periodicity
of El Niño in the past, and have studied such features as
growth rings on trees, shells, and corals to learn when El Niño
conditions have occurred. It is clear that strong El Niño
conditions take place around once every four years, with even stronger
ones possibly happening at other intervals. Meteorologists have come
to refer to only the strong events with global climatic effects as
El Niño, and intervening "normal" years as La Nina.
Whether the oscillation between El Niño and La Nina is changing
because of an increase in global temperature remains a subject of
debated (see Chapter 23).
For more information see: http://www.elnino.noaa.gov
Other Feature Articles
in this chapter: 1 : 2 : 3 : 4
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