Category: Publications2023

Publications that published in 2023

On dynamical downscaling of ENSO-induced oceanic anomalies off Baja California Peninsula, Mexico: role of the air-sea heat flux

Rivas, D., Counillon, F., Keenlyside, N. 2023: On dynamical downscaling of ENSO-induced oceanic anomalies off Baja California Peninsula, Mexico: role of the air-sea heat flux. Front Mar Sci. https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2023.1179649

Summary: The El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) phenomenon is responsible for important physical and biogeochemical anomalies in the Northeastern Pacific Ocean. The event of 1997-98 has been one of the most intense in the last decades and it had large implications for the waters off Baja California (BC) Peninsula with a pronounced warm sea surface temperature (SST) anomaly adjacent to the coast. Downscaling of reanalysis products was carried out using a mesoscale-resolving numerical ocean model to reproduce the regional SST anomalies. The nested model has a 9 km horizontal resolution that extend from Cabo Corrientes to Point Conception. A downscaling experiment that computes surface fluxes online with bulk formulae achieves a better representation of the event than a version with prescribed surface fluxes. The nested system improves the representation of the large scale warming and the localized SST anomaly adjacent to BC Peninsula compared to the reanalysis product. A sensitivity analysis shows that air temperature and to a lesser extent wind stress anomalies are the primary drivers of the formation of BC temperature anomaly. The warm air-temperature anomalies advect from the near-equatorial regions and the central north Pacific and is associated with sea-level pressure anomalies in the synoptic-scale atmospheric circulation. This regional warm pool has a pronounced signature on sea level anomaly in agreement with observations, which may have implications for biogeochemistry.

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Pacific oceanic front amplifies the impact of Atlantic oceanic front on North Atlantic blocking

Cheung, HN., Omrani, NE., Ogawa, F., Keenlyside, N., Nakamura, H., Zhou, W. 2023: Pacific oceanic front amplifies the impact of Atlantic oceanic front on North Atlantic blocking. npj Clim Atmos Sci 6, 61. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41612-023-00370-x

Summary: Atmospheric blocking is a crucial driver of extreme weather events, but its climatological frequency is largely underestimated in state-of-the-art climate models, especially around the North Atlantic. While air-sea interaction along the North Atlantic oceanic frontal region is known to influence Atlantic blocking activity, remote effects from the Pacific have been less studied. Here we use semi-idealised experiments with an atmospheric general circulation model to demonstrate that the mid-latitude Pacific oceanic front is crucial for climatological Atlantic blocking activity. The front intensifies the Pacific eddy-driven jet that extends eastward towards the North Atlantic. The eastward-extended Pacific jet reinforces the North Atlantic circulation response to the Atlantic oceanic front, including the storm track activity and the eddy-driven jet. The strengthening of the eddy-driven jet reduces the Greenland blocking frequency. Moreover, the Pacific oceanic front greatly strengthens the stationary planetary-scale ridge in Europe. Together with a stronger northeastward extension of the Atlantic storm track, enhanced interaction between extratropical cyclones and the European ridge favours the occurrence of Euro-Atlantic blocking. Therefore, the North Atlantic circulation response amplified remotely by the Pacific oceanic front substantially increases Euro-Atlantic blocking frequency while decreasing Greenland blocking frequency.

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Trends and internal variability in Brazilian hydropower catchments (Master’s thesis)

Byermoen, Emilie. 2023: Trends and internal variability in Brazilian hydropower catchments. Master’s thesis, University of Bergen, Norway. https://bora.uib.no/bora-xmlui/handle/11250/3071878

Summary: Hydropower is a major energy source in Brazil, and long-term hydropower production planning is crucial both for maintaining energy and water security in the country. The amount of water that is available to electricity production in the reservoirs have changed in the recent years, and there is an urgent need to understand the cause(s) of these changes, and whether observed stream flow trends will persist, reverse or amplify in the future. In this thesis, I therefore separate externally forced precipitation and evaporation trends and variability from internal variations originating in the ocean for three hydrographic catchments in Brazil: Óbidos catchment in Amazon, Propria catchment in São Francisco and Porto Murtinho catchment in Paraguay. I compare an ocean anomaly assimilation experiment of Norwegian Climate Prediction Model (NorCPM) to an externally forced historical experiment and observed stream flow, precipitation and evaporation in the catchments. The results indicate that the multi-decadal increasing stream flow trend in Amazon is (partly) externally forced, and might therefore persist, but that the SON stream flow is tightly connected to JJA precipitation variation which is shown to be driven by ocean variation, and may therefore reverse in the future. The long-term decrease of precipitation in São francisco is likely to be caused by internal variability, and is therefore likely to (partly) restore in the future, but results indicate that decadal stream flow variations in the basin is substantially impacted by other factors than precipitation as well. São Francisco catchment is found to be strongly connected to DJF precipitation variations that the model is unable to replicate. In Paraguay, I find that the austral summer stream flow is tightly connected to inter-annual precipitation variability that originates in the ocean in austral winter and spring. The steep significant decrease in stream flow over the last decades in Paraguay catchment is likely to have additional causes than precipitation, according to the results. All the results have implications for hydropower and water management planning in the three catchments in Brazil.

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Ocean–atmosphere interaction at the Gulf Stream sea surface temperature front: variability and impacts on midlatitude atmospheric circulation (PhD thesis)

Luca Famooss-Paolini (2023-05-26): Ocean–atmosphere interaction at the Gulf Stream sea surface temperature front: variability and impacts on midlatitude atmospheric circulation. PhD thesis, Ca’ Foscari University, Italy. http://hdl.handle.net/10579/25044 .

Summary: Recent studies show that the Gulf Stream Front (GSF) is an essential ingredient of the Northern Hemisphere climate. However, the nature of the air-ocean interaction associated with the GSF variability is not understood. This thesis first analyses the atmospheric response to the meridional slip of the GSF and its dependence on model resolution, using multi-model atmospheric simulations and the ERA5 reanalysis. Finally, the thesis analyses the spectral features of the NAO-GSF interaction and the mechanisms through which the NAO forces the GSF slip, using atmospheric and oceanic reanalyses. Regarding the first point, the results show that the GSF slip induces local diabatic heat anomalies that are mainly balanced by the vertical motion and meridional transport of transient eddy streams. On the large scale, the GSF slip is associated with the homo-directional slip of the eddy-driven jet and the storm-track. However, the atmospheric response is dependent on model resolution. Only those with a resolution higher than 50 km reproduce a response similar to the observed anomalies. Regarding the second point, the results show that the NAO and the meridional position of the GSF covary on the decadal scale, but only during 1972-2018. The non-stationarity of this decadal covariability is also shown by the time dependence of their lead-lag relationship. The lag between the NAO and the GSF response on the decadal scale can be interpreted as the effect of several mechanisms. However, not all of them are stationary. There is evidence of Rossby wave propagation only before 1990, which can explain the time dependence of the NAO-GSF lead-lag relationship..

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Forecasting harmful algae blooms: Application to Dinophysis acuminata in northern Norway

Silva, E., Counillon, F., Brajard, J., Pettersson, L.H., Naustvoll, L. 2023: Forecasting harmful algae blooms: Application to Dinophysis acuminata in northern Norway.  Harmful Algae. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hal.2023.102442

Summary: Dinophysis acuminata produces Diarrhetic Shellfish Toxins (DST) that contaminate natural and farmed shellfish, leading to public health risks and economically impacting mussel farms. For this reason, there is a high interest in understanding and predicting D. acuminata blooms. This study assesses the environmental conditions and develops a sub-seasonal (7 – 28 days) forecast model to predict D. acuminata cells abundance in the Lyngen fjord located in northern Norway. A Support Vector Machine (SVM) model is trained to predict future D. acuminata cells abundance by using the past cell concentration, sea surface temperature (SST), Photosynthetic Active Radiation (PAR), and wind speed. Cells concentration of Dinophysis spp. are measured in-situ from 2006 to 2019, and SST, PAR, and surface wind speed are obtained by satellite remote sensing. D. acuminata only explains 40% of DST variability from 2006 to 2011, but it changes to 65% after 2011 when D. acuta prevalence reduced. The D. acuminata blooms can reach concentration up to 3954 cells l−1 and are restricted to the summer during warmer waters, varying from 7.8 to 12.7 °C. The forecast model predicts with fair accuracy the seasonal development of the blooms and the blooms amplitude, showing a coefficient of determination varying from 0.46 to 0.55. SST has been found to be a useful predictor for the seasonal development of the blooms, while the past cells abundance is needed for updating the current status and adjusting the blooms timing and amplitude. The calibrated model should be tested operationally in the future to provide an early warning of D. acuminata blooms in the Lyngen fjord. The approach can be generalized to other regions by recalibrating the model with local observations of D. acuminata blooms and remote sensing data.

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Phytoplankton abundance in the Barents Sea is predictable up to five years in advance

Fransner, F., Olsen, A., Årthun, M., Counillon, F., Tjiputra, J., Samuelsen, A., Keenlyside, N. 2023: Phytoplankton abundance in the Barents Sea is predictable up to five years in advance. Commun Earth Environ. https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-023-00791-9

Summary: The Barents Sea is a highly biologically productive Arctic shelf sea with several commercially important fish stocks. Interannual-to-decadal predictions of its ecosystem would therefore be valuable for marine resource management. Here, we demonstrate that the abundance of phytoplankton, the base of the marine food web, can be predicted up to five years in advance in the Barents Sea with the Norwegian Climate Prediction Model. We identify two different mechanisms giving rise to this predictability; 1) in the southern ice-free Atlantic Domain, skillful prediction is a result of the advection of waters with anomalous nitrate concentrations from the Subpolar North Atlantic; 2) in the northern Polar Domain, phytoplankton predictability is a result of the skillful prediction of the summer ice concentration, which influences the light availability. The skillful prediction of the phytoplankton abundance is an important step forward in the development of numerical ecosystem predictions of the Barents Sea.

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Future strengthening of the Nordic Seas overturning circulation

Årthun, M., Asbjørnsen, H., Chafik, L., Johnson, H.L., Våge, K. 2023: Future strengthening of the Nordic Seas overturning circulation. Nat Commun. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-023-37846-6

Summary: The overturning circulation in the Nordic Seas involves the transformation of warm Atlantic waters into cold, dense overflows. These overflow waters return to the North Atlantic and form the headwaters to the deep limb of the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC). The Nordic Seas are thus a key component of the AMOC. However, little is known about the response of the overturning circulation in the Nordic Seas to future climate change. Here we show using global climate models that, in contrast to the North Atlantic, the simulated density-space overturning circulation in the Nordic Seas increases throughout most of the 21st century as a result of enhanced horizontal circulation and a strengthened zonal density gradient. The increased Nordic Seas overturning is furthermore manifested in the overturning circulation in the eastern subpolar North Atlantic. A strengthened Nordic Seas overturning circulation could therefore be a stabilizing factor in the future AMOC.

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Rapid sea ice changes in the future Barents Sea

Rieke, O., Årthun, M., Dörr, J.S. 2023: Rapid sea ice changes in the future Barents Sea. The Cryosphere. https://doi.org/10.5194/tc-17-1445-2023

Summary: Observed and future winter Arctic sea ice loss is strongest in the Barents Sea. However, the anthropogenic signal of the sea ice decline is superimposed by pronounced internal variability that represents a large source of uncertainty in future climate projections. A notable manifestation of internal variability is rapid ice change events (RICEs) that greatly exceed the anthropogenic trend. These RICEs are associated with large displacements of the sea ice edge which could potentially have both local and remote impacts on the climate system. In this study we present the first investigation of the frequency and drivers of RICEs in the future Barents Sea, using multi-member ensemble simulations from CMIP5 and CMIP6. A majority of RICEs are triggered by trends in ocean heat transport or surface heat fluxes. Ice loss events are associated with increasing trends in ocean heat transport and decreasing trends in surface heat loss. RICEs are a common feature of the future Barents Sea until the region becomes close to ice-free. As their evolution over time is closely tied to the average sea ice conditions, rapid ice changes in the Barents Sea may serve as a precursor for future changes in adjacent seas.

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Framework for an Ocean-Connected Supermodel of the Earth System

Counillon, F., Keenlyside, N., Wang, S., Devilliers, M., Gupta, A., Koseki, S., Shen, M.-L. 2023: Framework for an Ocean-Connected Supermodel of the Earth System. JAMES. https://doi.org/10.1029/2022MS003310

Summary: Observed and future winter Arctic sea ice loss is strongest in the Barents Sea. However, the anthropogenic signal of the sea ice decline is superimposed by pronounced internal variability that represents a large source of uncertainty in future climate projections. A notable manifestation of internal variability is rapid ice change events (RICEs) that greatly exceed the anthropogenic trend. These RICEs are associated with large displacements of the sea ice edge which could potentially have both local and remote impacts on the climate system. In this study we present the first investigation of the frequency and drivers of RICEs in the future Barents Sea, using multi-member ensemble simulations from CMIP5 and CMIP6. A majority of RICEs are triggered by trends in ocean heat transport or surface heat fluxes. Ice loss events are associated with increasing trends in ocean heat transport and decreasing trends in surface heat loss. RICEs are a common feature of the future Barents Sea until the region becomes close to ice-free. As their evolution over time is closely tied to the average sea ice conditions, rapid ice changes in the Barents Sea may serve as a precursor for future changes in adjacent seas.

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Factors influencing interannual variability of Belg rain in Ethiopia (Master’s thesis)

Knudsen, Carina. 2023: Factors influencing interannual variability of Belg rain in Ethiopia. Master’s thesis, University of Bergen, Norway. https://bora.uib.no/bora-xmlui/handle/11250/3059081

Summary: The aim of this thesis is to investigate the factors affecting the interannual variability of the Belg rain in Ethiopia, in addition to see in which degree the NorESM can capture these factors. A significant connection was found between Belg rain and five ocean regions: Agulhas current, the northern and southern patch of the PMM, Benguela Niño, and the Indian Ocean. There was also found a connection between Belg rainfall in Ethiopia and a negative NAO index and La Niña events. The results showed that the wind pattern over the Indian Ocean is a large contributor, in addition to the Subtropical Westerly Jet. The weather in Ethiopia is highly variable, and capturing this variability has been a major challenge. Investigating the factors causing interannual variability is an important step in improving seasonal predictions and climate services. These predictions can contribute to warning systems in case of extreme events, which is important due to Ethiopia’s dependence on agriculture.

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