2006
DOI: 10.1175/jcli3903.1
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Climate Fluctuations of Tropical Coupled Systems—The Role of Ocean Dynamics

Abstract: The tropical oceans have long been recognized as the most important region for large-scale oceanatmosphere interactions, giving rise to coupled climate variations on several time scales. During the Tropical Ocean Global Atmosphere (TOGA) decade, the focus of much tropical ocean research was on understanding El Niño-related processes and on development of tropical ocean models capable of simulating and predicting El Niño. These studies led to an appreciation of the vital role the ocean plays in providing the me… Show more

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Cited by 218 publications
(175 citation statements)
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References 383 publications
(446 reference statements)
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“…The IOD is a major mode of climate variability over the tropical Indian Ocean, strongly locked in phase to the July-October season when the southeasterly alongshore winds induce upwelling on the Indonesian coast and permit Bjerknes feedback (Saji et al 1999). For recent reviews, see Chang et al (2006) and Schott et al (2009) and references therein. Surprisingly, the shoaling thermocline and enhanced thermocline feedback in the eastern equatorial Indian Ocean do not lead to an increase in IOD interannual variability because atmospheric feedback weakens in response to strengthened tropospheric stability (Zheng et al 2010).…”
Section: B Tropical Indian Oceanmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The IOD is a major mode of climate variability over the tropical Indian Ocean, strongly locked in phase to the July-October season when the southeasterly alongshore winds induce upwelling on the Indonesian coast and permit Bjerknes feedback (Saji et al 1999). For recent reviews, see Chang et al (2006) and Schott et al (2009) and references therein. Surprisingly, the shoaling thermocline and enhanced thermocline feedback in the eastern equatorial Indian Ocean do not lead to an increase in IOD interannual variability because atmospheric feedback weakens in response to strengthened tropospheric stability (Zheng et al 2010).…”
Section: B Tropical Indian Oceanmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Small changes in tropical SST nevertheless can be highly influential on climate, as illustrated by observed climate variability. For example, over the tropical Atlantic and Indian Oceans, SST anomalies on the order of only 0.58C induce atmospheric anomalies not only locally but over remote areas (see recent reviews by Chang et al 2006;Schott et al 2009). Of larger magnitude and more expansive in space, SST anomalies over the large Pacific basin associated with El Niñ o-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) have long-lasting climatic effects over the entire globe (e.g., Alexander et al 2002).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the latter case, these coastal biases extend far offshore, covering almost the entire subtropical South Atlantic. Much of the tropical North Atlantic features cold SST biases of up to 2K associated with excessively strong northeast trades, reminiscent of the windevaporation-SST (WES) feedback (Xie and Carton 2004;Chang et al 2006). In association with the southward gradient of the SST bias, the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) is shifted southward during MAM.…”
Section: Model Description and Experiments Designmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is particularly evident along the equator (Breugem et al 2006) where the occurrence of interannual warm events (also termed Atlantic Niños) is anchored to the seasonal shoaling of the thermocline in boreal summer. Furthermore, errors in the mean state can affect ocean-atmosphere feedbacks and thus affect both the zonal and meridional modes of TAV (Xie and Carton 2004;Chang et al 2006;Keenlyside and Latif 2007). As a result, current prediction models perform poorly in the region (Nobre and Repelli 2004;Stockdale et al 2006;Huang et al 2007).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Tropical Atlantic Variability (TAV) have important impacts over Africa and South America, where rain-fed agriculture is an important part of their economies (Xie and Carton, 2004;Chang et al, 2006a;Kushnir et al, 2006;Rodríguez-Fonseca et al, 2015). However, historically major efforts have been done in understanding the Tropical Pacific which holds the most important inter-annual variability mode in terms of the global impacts: El Niño and the Southern Oscillation (ENSO, Philander, 1990).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%