NASA/NOAA Study Finds El Ninos are Growing Stronger

Deviations from normal sea surface temperatures (left) and sea surface heights (right) at the peak of the 2009-2010 central Pacific El Ni単o, as measured by NOAA polar orbiting satellites and NASA’s Jason-1 spacecraft, respectively. The warmest temperatures and highest sea levels were located in the central equatorial Pacific. Image credit: NASA/JPL-NOAA
PASADENA, Calif. - A relatively new type of El Ni単o, which has its warmest waters in the central-equatorial Pacific Ocean, rather than in the eastern-equatorial Pacific, is becoming more common and progressively stronger, according to a new study by NASA and NOAA. The research may improve our understanding of the relationship between El Ni単os and climate change, and has potentially significant implications for long-term weather forecasting.
Lead author Tong Lee of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., and Michael McPhaden of NOAA’s Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory, Seattle, measured changes in El Ni単o intensity since 1982. They analyzed NOAA satellite observations of sea surface temperature, checked against and blended with directly-measured ocean temperature data. The strength of each El Ni単o was gauged by how much its sea surface temperatures deviated from the average. They found the intensity of El Ni単os in the central Pacific has nearly doubled, with the most intense event occurring in 2009-10. The scientists say the stronger El Ni単os help explain a steady rise in central Pacific sea surface temperatures observed over the past few decades in previous studies-a trend attributed by some to the effects of global warming. While Lee and McPhaden observed a rise in sea surface temperatures during El Ni単o years, no significant temperature increases were seen in years when ocean conditions were neutral, or when El Ni単o’s cool water counterpart, La Ni単a, was present. "Our study concludes the long-term warming trend seen in the central Pacific is primarily due to more intense El Ni単os, rather than a general rise of background temperatures," said Lee. "These results suggest climate change may already be affecting El Ni単o by shifting the center of action from the eastern to the central Pacific," said McPhaden. "El Ni単o’s impact on global weather patterns is different if ocean warming occurs primarily in the central Pacific, instead of the eastern Pacific. "If the trend we observe continues," McPhaden added, "it could throw a monkey wrench into long-range weather forecasting, which is largely based on our understanding of El Ni単os from the latter half of the 20th century."Links
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