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14.3: El Niño Teleconnections

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    Teleconnections are statistically significant correlations between weather events that occur at different places on the Earth. Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\) shows the dominant global teleconnections associated with the El Niño/Southern Oscillation.

    World map with regions receiving enhanced rain during an El Niño event identified with dashed lines, and regions with drought during an El Niño event identified with solid lines.
    Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\): Sketch of regions receiving enhanced rain (dashed lines) or drought (solid lines) during an El Niño event. (0) indicates that rain changed during the year in which El Niño began, (+) indicates that rain changed during the year after El Niño began. After Ropelewski and Halpert (1987).

    The influence of ENSO is through its influence on convection and associated latent heat release in the equatorial Pacific. As the area of heavy rain moves east, the source of atmospheric heating moves with the rain, leading to widespread changes in atmospheric circulation and weather patterns outside the tropical Pacific (McPhaden, Zebiak and Glantz, 2006), including perturbations in atmospheric pressure (figure \(\PageIndex{2}\)). This sequence of events leads to some predictability of weather patterns a season in advance over North America, Brazil, Australia, South Africa and other regions.

    A pattern of pressure anomalies in the atmosphere, as caused by the changing patterns of convection in the equatorial Pacific during an El Niño.
    Figure \(\PageIndex{2}\): Changing patterns of convection in the equatorial Pacific during an El Niño, set up a pattern of pressure anomalies in the atmosphere (solid lines) which influence the extratropical atmosphere. After Rasmusson and Wallace (1983).

    The ENSO perturbations to mid-latitude and tropical weather systems leads to dramatic changes in rainfall in some regions (figure \(\PageIndex{1}\)). As the convective regions migrate east along the equator, they bring rain to the normally arid, central-Pacific islands. The lack of rain the western Pacific leads to drought in Indonesia and Australia.

    An Example: Variability of Texas Rainfall

    Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\) shows a global view of teleconnections. Let’s zoom in to one region, Texas, that I chose only because I live there. The global figure shows that the region should have higher than normal rainfall in the winter season after El Niño begins. I therefore correlated yearly averaged rainfall for the state of Texas to the Southern Oscillation Index (figure \(\PageIndex{3}\)). Wet years correspond to El Niño years in the equatorial Pacific. During El Niño, convection normally found in the western equatorial Pacific moved east into the central equatorial Pacific. The subtropical jet also moves east, carrying tropical moisture across Mexico to Texas and the Mississippi Valley. Cold fronts in winter interact with the upper level moisture to produce abundant winter rains from Texas eastward.

    Plot of yearly averaged rainfall averaged over Texas as a function of the year's average Southern Oscillation Index. Line of best fit shows a negative correlation.
    Figure \(\PageIndex{3}\): Correlation of yearly averaged rainfall averaged over Texas plotted as a function of the Southern Oscillation Index averaged for the year. From Stewart (1995).

    This page titled 14.3: El Niño Teleconnections is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Robert H. Stewart via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.