Future Changes in the Intensity and Duration of Marine Heat and Cold Waves: Insights from Coupled Model Initial-Condition Large Ensembles

Author:

Deser Clara1,Phillips Adam S.1,Alexander Michael. A.2,Amaya Dillon J.2,Capotondi Antonietta23,Jacox Michael G.245,Scott James D.23

Affiliation:

1. a National Center for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, Colorado

2. b NOAA Physical Sciences Laboratory, Boulder, Colorado

3. c CIRES, University of Colorado Boulder, Boulder, Colorado

4. d NOAA Southwest Fisheries Science Center, Monterey, California

5. e University of California Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, California

Abstract

Abstract The future evolution of sea surface temperature (SST) extremes is of great concern, not only for the health of marine ecosystems and sustainability of commercial fisheries, but also for precipitation extremes fueled by moisture evaporated from the ocean. This study examines the projected influence of anthropogenic climate change on the intensity and duration of monthly SST extremes, hereafter termed marine heat waves (MHWs) and marine cold waves (MCWs), based on initial-condition large ensembles with seven Earth system models. The large number of simulations (30–100) with each model allows for robust quantification of future changes in both the mean state and variability in each model. In general, models indicate that future changes in variability will cause MHW and MCW events to intensify in the northern extratropics and weaken in the tropics and Southern Ocean, and to shorten in duration in many areas. These changes are generally symmetric between MHWs and MCWs, except for the longitude of duration change in the tropical Pacific and sign of duration change in the Arctic. Projected changes in ENSO account for a large fraction of the variability-induced changes in MHW and MCW characteristics in each model and are responsible for much of the intermodel spread as a result of differences in future ENSO behavior. The variability-related changes in MHW and MCW characteristics noted above are superimposed upon large mean-state changes. Indeed, their contribution to the total change in SST during MHW and MCW events is generally <10% except in polar regions where they contribute upward of 50%.

Funder

Climate Program Office

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

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