Ocean Surface Warming and Long-Term Variability in Rainfall in Equatorial Pacific Atolls
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White, Ian
Falkland, Tony
Redfern, Farran
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Freshwater availability in Pacific equatorial atolls is highly variable because of the influence of El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) on rainfall. IPCC projections for the central and western tropical Pacific suggest annual rainfall (Pa) will increase as sea surface temperature (SST) rises. Future changes in ENSO frequency and intensity and in hydrological droughts, however, are uncertain. Here, trends in monthly, seasonal, annual, annual maximum, and minimum rainfall in two equatorial atolls in the eastern and central tropical Pacific are compared with trends in the SST of the surrounding Nino regions from 1951 to 2023. Significant increasing trends in the warm season, annual, and annual maximum SST in the Nino1 + 2, Nino3, and Nino4 regions were of order +1.0 °C/100 y. There were no significant trends in the cool season or annual minimum SST. Despite ocean warming, there were no significant trends in atoll Pa, in intra-annual or interannual variability over 7 decades for either SST or Pa, or in the relative strengths of warm/cool and wet/dry seasons. Extreme, large Pa only occurred after 1987, indicative of ocean warming. Extreme, small Pa happened throughout the period, suggesting no change in drought frequency. Correlations between 12-month P and SST were very strong, with historic rates of increases in Pa of around 1200 mm/y/°C, consistent with projections. The results indicate that the recharge of atoll groundwater will increase as oceans warm, but droughts will remain a major challenge.
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Atmosphere
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