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Coupling of Indo-Pacific climate variability over the last millennium

Authors :
Matthew H. England
B. Philibosian
David Heslop
Nerilie J. Abram
Tsai Luen Yu
Nicky M. Wright
Bronwyn C. Dixon
Sri Yudawati Cahyarini
Caroline C. Ummenhofer
J. B. Wurtzel
Chuan-Chou Shen
Bethany Ellis
Hai Cheng
R. Lawrence Edwards
Source :
Nature. 579:385-392
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2020.

Abstract

The Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) affects climate and rainfall across the world, and most severely in nations surrounding the Indian Ocean1–4. The frequency and intensity of positive IOD events increased during the twentieth century5 and may continue to intensify in a warming world6. However, confidence in predictions of future IOD change is limited by known biases in IOD models7 and the lack of information on natural IOD variability before anthropogenic climate change. Here we use precisely dated and highly resolved coral records from the eastern equatorial Indian Ocean, where the signature of IOD variability is strong and unambiguous, to produce a semi-continuous reconstruction of IOD variability that covers five centuries of the last millennium. Our reconstruction demonstrates that extreme positive IOD events were rare before 1960. However, the most extreme event on record (1997) is not unprecedented, because at least one event that was approximately 27 to 42 per cent larger occurred naturally during the seventeenth century. We further show that a persistent, tight coupling existed between the variability of the IOD and the El Nino/Southern Oscillation during the last millennium. Indo-Pacific coupling was characterized by weak interannual variability before approximately 1590, which probably altered teleconnection patterns, and by anomalously strong variability during the seventeenth century, which was associated with societal upheaval in tropical Asia. A tendency towards clustering of positive IOD events is evident in our reconstruction, which—together with the identification of extreme IOD variability and persistent tropical Indo-Pacific climate coupling—may have implications for improving seasonal and decadal predictions and managing the climate risks of future IOD variability. Coral records indicate that the variability of the Indian Ocean Dipole over the last millennium is strongly coupled to variability in the El Nino/Southern Oscillation and that recent extremes are unusual but not unprecedented.

Details

ISSN :
14764687 and 00280836
Volume :
579
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c5e21e31e5c94f3e6eef714bc22c863f