Zhengyao Lu1, Zhengyu Liu1,2, Jiang Zhu2
1 Laboratory for Climate, Ocean and Atmosphere Studies, School of Physics, Peking University, Beijing 100871, P. R. China.
2 Center for Climatic Research and Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI 53706, USA.
Abstract
The influence of ice-sheet retreat on the El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) variability is studied using a transient simulation in NCAR-CCSM3 forced only by variations in continental ice sheets during the last deglaciation. The most striking feature is an abrupt strengthening of ENSO (by ~25 %) at 14 thousand years before present (ka BP) in response to a significant retreat (an equivalent ~25 m sea-level rise) of the Laurentide ice sheet (LIS). This abrupt intensification of ENSO is caused mainly by a sudden weakening of the equatorial annual cycle through the nonlinear mechanism of frequency entrainment, rather than an increase in the coupled ocean–atmosphere instability. The weakened annual cycle corresponds to a reduced north–south cross-equatorial annual mean SST contrast in the eastern Pacific. This reduced interhemispheric SST gradient—significant cooling north of the equator—is forced predominantly by an anomalous easterly from an abrupt polarward shift of the jet stream in the Northern Hemisphere, which extends to the northeastern tropical Pacific Ocean surface and is reinforced by the wind-evaporation-SST feedback then propagates equatorward; it could also be contributed by a fast sea-ice expansion and a consequent cooling in the North Pacific and North Atlantic that is induced by the retreat of the LIS.
Citation
Zhengyao Lu, Zhengyu Liu and Jiang Zhu, 2015: Abrupt intensification of ENSO forced by deglacial ice-sheet retreat in CCSM3. Climate Dynamics. [DOI: 10.1007/s00382-015-2681-3]