Weakening of the Indian Ocean Dipole in the Mid-Holocene due to the Mean Oceanic Climatology Change

Author:

Liu Shanshan1,Yuan Chaoxia1,Luo Jing-jia1,Ma Xiaofan1,Zhou Xuecheng2,Yamagata Toshio13

Affiliation:

1. a Key Laboratory of Meteorological Disaster, Ministry of Education, Joint International Research Laboratory of Climate and Environment Change, Collaborative Innovation Center on Forecast and Evaluation of Meteorological Disasters, Institute for Climate and Application Research, Nanjing University of Information Science and Technology, Nanjing, China

2. b Meteorological Service Center of Jiangsu Province, Nanjing, China

3. c Application Laboratory, Research Institute for Value-Added-Information Generation, Japan Agency for Marine–Earth Science and Technology, Yokohama, Japan

Abstract

Abstract The Indian Ocean dipole (IOD) is one of the leading modes of interannual climate variability in the tropical Indian Ocean (IO). The paleoclimate provides real climate scenarios to examine IOD behaviors and the linkage to basic states. Based on 18 models from phases 5 and 6 of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP5/6), the IOD change from the preindustrial period to the mid-Holocene is investigated. The multimodel mean reveals that the IOD variability weakens by 14%, as measured by the standard deviation of the dipole mode index, which is defined using the zonal sea surface temperature (SST) difference. Such attenuation is dominated by the spatially consistent suppression in the western-pole SST variability, while the eastern pole contributes little due to the opposite-signed changes in its northwestern and southeastern portions. The primary reason for the aforementioned changes comes from the altered climatic background, which displays a positive IOD-like pattern during IOD growing seasons, with intensified westward currents along the equator and northwestward currents in the southeastern equatorial IO. Such changes in the mean-state currents modulate the strength of the IOD-related anomalous advection and subsequently cause alterations in the IOD variability. Further analyses show that the IOD attenuation in the mid-Holocene is unlikely to be caused by the concurrently subdued El Niño–Southern Oscillation in the tropical Pacific, partially because of the diminished connections between the two oscillations themselves. The above simulated changes in both the IO mean climatology and IOD variability agree well with the available paleo records in literature. Significance Statement Understanding variations in the Indian Ocean dipole (IOD) and its relationship to the altered background mean state can advance our knowledge of tropical climate dynamics. The paleoclimate provides the opportunity to address this issue under real climate scenarios in the past. Based on multiple models from CMIP5/6, we investigate IOD changes during the mid-Holocene compared to the preindustrial period. The result shows a weakening of the IOD, and the main mechanism lies in the altered anomalous advection modulated by changes in the mean-state currents. The simulated changes in both the mean state and IOD variability are consistent with available paleo data. The present study extends the research scale of IOD dynamics beyond instrumental periods and provides scientific bases for deciphering geological records.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

Reference87 articles.

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