Mexican drought: an observational modeling and tree ring study of variability and climate change

Variability of Mexican hydroclimate, with special attention to persistent drought, is examined using observations, model simulations forced by historical sea surface temperature (SST), tree ring reconstructions of past climate and model simulations and projections of naturally and anthropogenically...

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Main Authors: Seager, Richard, Ting, Mingfang, Davis, M., Cane, Mark A., Naik, Naomi H., Nakamura, Jennifer A., Li, Cuihua, Cook, Edward R., Stahle, David W.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Columbia University 2009
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.7916/d8-7wn1-rf05
https://academiccommons.columbia.edu/doi/10.7916/d8-7wn1-rf05
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spelling ftdatacite:10.7916/d8-7wn1-rf05 2023-05-15T17:33:36+02:00 Mexican drought: an observational modeling and tree ring study of variability and climate change Seager, Richard Ting, Mingfang Davis, M. Cane, Mark A. Naik, Naomi H. Nakamura, Jennifer A. Li, Cuihua Cook, Edward R. Stahle, David W. 2009 https://dx.doi.org/10.7916/d8-7wn1-rf05 https://academiccommons.columbia.edu/doi/10.7916/d8-7wn1-rf05 unknown Columbia University Droughts Hydrology Climatology Dendrochronology Ocean-atmosphere interaction Climatic changes article-journal ScholarlyArticle Text 2009 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.7916/d8-7wn1-rf05 2022-03-10T12:44:35Z Variability of Mexican hydroclimate, with special attention to persistent drought, is examined using observations, model simulations forced by historical sea surface temperature (SST), tree ring reconstructions of past climate and model simulations and projections of naturally and anthropogenically forced climate change. During the winter half year, hydroclimate across México is influenced by the state of the tropical Pacific Ocean with the Atlantic playing little role. Mexican winters tend to be wetter during El Niño conditions. In the summer half year northern México is also wetter when El Niño conditions prevail, but southern México is drier. A warm tropical North Atlantic Ocean makes northern México dry and southern México wet. These relationships are reasonably well reproduced in ensembles of atmosphere model simulations forced by historical SST for the period from 1856 to 2002. Large ensembles of 100 day long integrations are used to examine the day to day evolution of the atmospheric circulation and precipitation in response to a sudden imposition of a El Niño SST anomaly in the summer half year. Kelvin waves propagate east and immediately cause increased column-integrated moisture divergence and reduced precipitation over the tropical Americas and Intra-America Seas. Within a few days a low level high pressure anomaly develops over the Gulf of México. A forced nonlinear model is used to demonstrate that this low is forced by the reduced atmospheric heating over the tropical Atlantic-Intra-America Seas area. Tree ring reconstructions that extend back before the period of instrumental precipitation data coverage are used to verify long model simulations forced by historical SST. The early to mid 1950s drought in northern México appears to have been the most severe since the mid nineteenth century and likely arose as a response to both a multiyear La Niña and a warm tropical North Atlantic. A drought in the 1890s was also severe and appears driven by a multiyear La Niña alone. The drought that began in the 1990s does not exceed these droughts in either duration or severity. Tree ring records extending back to the fourteenth century suggest that the late sixteenth century megadrought may have been the longest drought to have ever affected México. While the last decade or so in north and central México has been drier than preceding decades, the associated continental pattern of hydroclimate change does not fit that which models project to occur as a consequence of rising greenhouse gases and global warming. However, models robustly predict that México will dry as a consequence of global warm- ing and that this drying should already be underway. At least for now, in nature, this is likely obscured by strong natural atmosphere-ocean variability. Text North Atlantic DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
topic Droughts
Hydrology
Climatology
Dendrochronology
Ocean-atmosphere interaction
Climatic changes
spellingShingle Droughts
Hydrology
Climatology
Dendrochronology
Ocean-atmosphere interaction
Climatic changes
Seager, Richard
Ting, Mingfang
Davis, M.
Cane, Mark A.
Naik, Naomi H.
Nakamura, Jennifer A.
Li, Cuihua
Cook, Edward R.
Stahle, David W.
Mexican drought: an observational modeling and tree ring study of variability and climate change
topic_facet Droughts
Hydrology
Climatology
Dendrochronology
Ocean-atmosphere interaction
Climatic changes
description Variability of Mexican hydroclimate, with special attention to persistent drought, is examined using observations, model simulations forced by historical sea surface temperature (SST), tree ring reconstructions of past climate and model simulations and projections of naturally and anthropogenically forced climate change. During the winter half year, hydroclimate across México is influenced by the state of the tropical Pacific Ocean with the Atlantic playing little role. Mexican winters tend to be wetter during El Niño conditions. In the summer half year northern México is also wetter when El Niño conditions prevail, but southern México is drier. A warm tropical North Atlantic Ocean makes northern México dry and southern México wet. These relationships are reasonably well reproduced in ensembles of atmosphere model simulations forced by historical SST for the period from 1856 to 2002. Large ensembles of 100 day long integrations are used to examine the day to day evolution of the atmospheric circulation and precipitation in response to a sudden imposition of a El Niño SST anomaly in the summer half year. Kelvin waves propagate east and immediately cause increased column-integrated moisture divergence and reduced precipitation over the tropical Americas and Intra-America Seas. Within a few days a low level high pressure anomaly develops over the Gulf of México. A forced nonlinear model is used to demonstrate that this low is forced by the reduced atmospheric heating over the tropical Atlantic-Intra-America Seas area. Tree ring reconstructions that extend back before the period of instrumental precipitation data coverage are used to verify long model simulations forced by historical SST. The early to mid 1950s drought in northern México appears to have been the most severe since the mid nineteenth century and likely arose as a response to both a multiyear La Niña and a warm tropical North Atlantic. A drought in the 1890s was also severe and appears driven by a multiyear La Niña alone. The drought that began in the 1990s does not exceed these droughts in either duration or severity. Tree ring records extending back to the fourteenth century suggest that the late sixteenth century megadrought may have been the longest drought to have ever affected México. While the last decade or so in north and central México has been drier than preceding decades, the associated continental pattern of hydroclimate change does not fit that which models project to occur as a consequence of rising greenhouse gases and global warming. However, models robustly predict that México will dry as a consequence of global warm- ing and that this drying should already be underway. At least for now, in nature, this is likely obscured by strong natural atmosphere-ocean variability.
format Text
author Seager, Richard
Ting, Mingfang
Davis, M.
Cane, Mark A.
Naik, Naomi H.
Nakamura, Jennifer A.
Li, Cuihua
Cook, Edward R.
Stahle, David W.
author_facet Seager, Richard
Ting, Mingfang
Davis, M.
Cane, Mark A.
Naik, Naomi H.
Nakamura, Jennifer A.
Li, Cuihua
Cook, Edward R.
Stahle, David W.
author_sort Seager, Richard
title Mexican drought: an observational modeling and tree ring study of variability and climate change
title_short Mexican drought: an observational modeling and tree ring study of variability and climate change
title_full Mexican drought: an observational modeling and tree ring study of variability and climate change
title_fullStr Mexican drought: an observational modeling and tree ring study of variability and climate change
title_full_unstemmed Mexican drought: an observational modeling and tree ring study of variability and climate change
title_sort mexican drought: an observational modeling and tree ring study of variability and climate change
publisher Columbia University
publishDate 2009
url https://dx.doi.org/10.7916/d8-7wn1-rf05
https://academiccommons.columbia.edu/doi/10.7916/d8-7wn1-rf05
geographic Pacific
geographic_facet Pacific
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_doi https://doi.org/10.7916/d8-7wn1-rf05
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