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Relative Contributions of Mean-State Shifts and ENSO-Driven Variability to Precipitation Changes in a Warming ClimateEl Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) is an important driver of regional hydroclimate variability through far-reaching teleconnections. This study uses simulations performed with coupled general circulation models (CGCMs) to investigate how regional precipitation in the twenty-first century may be affected by changes in both ENSO-driven precipitation variability and slowly evolving mean rainfall. First, a dominant, time-invariant pattern of canonical ENSO variability (cENSO) is identified in observed SST data. Next, the fidelity with which 33 state-of-the-art CGCMs represent the spatial structure and temporal variability of this pattern (as well as its associated precipitation responses) is evaluated in simulations of twentieth-century climate change. Possible changes in both the temporal variability of this pattern and its associated precipitation teleconnections are investigated in twenty-first-century climate projections. Models with better representation of the observed structure of the cENSO pattern produce winter rainfall teleconnection patterns that are in better accord with twentieth-century observations and more stationary during the twenty-first century. Finally, the model-predicted twenty-first-century rainfall response to cENSO is decomposed into the sum of three terms: 1) the twenty-first-century change in the mean state of precipitation, 2) the historical precipitation response to the cENSO pattern, and 3) a future enhancement in the rainfall response to cENSO, which amplifies rainfall extremes. By examining the three terms jointly, this conceptual framework allows the identification of regions likely to experience future rainfall anomalies that are without precedent in the current climate.
Document ID
20160000443
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Bonfils, Celine J. W.
(Lawrence Livermore National Lab. Livermore, CA, United States)
Santer, Benjamin D.
(Lawrence Livermore National Lab. Livermore, CA, United States)
Phillips, Thomas J.
(Lawrence Livermore National Lab. Livermore, CA, United States)
Marvel, Kate
(Lawrence Livermore National Lab. Livermore, CA, United States)
Leung, L. Ruby
(Pacific Northwest National Lab. Richland, WA, United States)
Doutriaux, Charles
(Lawrence Livermore National Lab. Livermore, CA, United States)
Capotondi, Antonietta
(Colorado Univ. Boulder, CO, United States)
Date Acquired
January 7, 2016
Publication Date
December 15, 2015
Publication Information
Publication: Journal of Climate
Publisher: American Meteorological Society
Volume: 28
Issue: 25
Subject Category
Meteorology And Climatology
Report/Patent Number
GSFC-E-DAA-TN28991
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: DE-AC52-07NA27344
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNX14AB99A
CONTRACT_GRANT: 13-ERD-032
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other
Keywords
Simulation
El Nino
climate
Variability
Teleconnections (meteorology)
Rain
Southern Oscillation

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