Placing the AD 2014-2016 'protracted' El Nino episode into a long-term context
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Allan, Robert J
Gergis, Joelle
D'Arrigo, Rosanne
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Sage Publications Inc
Abstract
Although extended or ‘protracted’ El Niño and La Niña episodes were first suggested nearly 20 years ago, they have not received the attention of other
‘flavours’ of the El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) or low-frequency ‘ENSO-like’ phenomena. In this study, instrumental variables and palaeoclimatic
reconstructions are used to investigate the most recent ‘protracted’ El Niño episode in 2014–2016, and place it into a longer historical context.
Although just reaching the threshold for such an episode, the 2014–2016 ‘protracted’ El Niño had very severe societal, agricultural, environmental and
ecological impacts, particularly in western Pacific regions like eastern Australia. We show that although ‘protracted’ ENSO episodes of either phase cause
similar, near-global modulations of weather and climate as during more ‘classical’ events, impacts associated with ‘protracted’ episodes last longer, with
strong influences in eastern Australia. The latter is a response to the dominance of Niño 4 sea surface temperature (SST) and associated atmospheric
teleconnection anomalies during ‘protracted’ ENSO episodes. Importantly, while Niño 4 SST anomalies recorded during the austral summer of 2016
were the highest values on record, an analysis of long-term palaeoclimate records indicates that there may have been episodes of greater magnitude and
duration than seen in instrumental observations. This suggests that shorter instrumental observations may underestimate the risks of possible future
ENSO extremes compared with those observed from multi-century palaeoclimate records. Improved knowledge of ENSO and the potential to forecast
‘protracted’ episodes would be of immense practical benefit to communities affected by the severe impacts of ENSO extremes.
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The Holocene
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2037-12-31
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