Posted on 04/09/2015 8:48:27 PM PDT by BenLurkin
The one common element in recent weather has been oddness. The West Coast has been warm and parched; the East Coast has been cold and snowed under. Fish are swimming into new waters, and hungry seals are washing up on California beaches.
A long-lived patch of warm water off the West Coast, about 1 to 4 degrees Celsius (2 to 7 degrees Fahrenheit) above normal, is part of whats wreaking much of this mayhem, according to two University of Washington papers to appear in Geophysical Research Letters, a journal of the American Geophysical Union.
In the fall of 2013 and early 2014 we started to notice a big, almost circular mass of water that just didnt cool off as much as it usually did, so by spring of 2014 it was warmer than we had ever seen it for that time of year, said Nick Bond, a climate scientist at the UW-based Joint Institute for the Study of the Atmosphere and Ocean, a joint research center of the UW and the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
Bond coined the term the blob last June in his monthly newsletter as Washingtons state climatologist. He said the huge patch of water 1,000 miles in each direction and 300 feet deep had contributed to Washingtons mild 2014 winter and might signal a warmer summer.
Ten months later, the blob is still off our shores, now squished up against the coast and extending about 1,000 miles offshore from Mexico up through Alaska, with water about 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) warmer than normal. Bond says all the models point to it continuing through the end of this year.
The new study explores the blobs origins. It finds that it relates to a persistent high-pressure ridge that caused a calmer ocean during the past two winters, so less heat was lost to cold air above. The warmer temperatures we see now arent due to more heating, but less winter cooling.
Has the blob reached your shore? The Northwest Association of Networked Ocean Observing Systems, a UW-led collaboration called NANOOS, just released a tool to show how ocean buoy temperature data compare to past values measured in Washington and Oregon waters. Read more here.
Co-authors on the paper are Meghan Cronin at NOAA in Seattle and a UW affiliate professor of oceanography, Nate Mantua at NOAA in Santa Cruz and Howard Freeland at Canadas Department of Fisheries and Oceans. The study was funded by NOAA.
The authors look at how the blob is affecting West Coast marine life. They find fish sightings in unusual places, supporting recent reports that West Coast marine ecosystems are suffering and the food web is being disrupted by warm, less nutrient-rich Pacific Ocean water.
The blobs influence also extends inland. As air passes over warmer water and reaches the coast it brings more heat and less snow, which the paper shows helped cause current drought conditions in California, Oregon and Washington.
The blob is just one element of a broader pattern in the Pacific Ocean whose influence reaches much further possibly to include two bone-chilling winters in the Eastern U.S.
A study in the same journal by Dennis Hartmann, a UW professor of atmospheric sciences, looks at the Pacific Oceans relationship to the cold 2013-14 winter in the central and eastern United States.
Despite all the talk about the polar vortex, Hartmann argues we need to look south to understand why so much
His study shows a decadal-scale pattern in the tropical Pacific Ocean linked with changes in the North Pacific, called the North Pacific mode, that sent atmospheric waves snaking along the globe to bring warm and dry air to the West Coast and very cold, wet air to the central and eastern states.
Lately this mode seems to have emerged as second to the El Niño Southern Oscillation in terms of driving the long-term variability, especially over North America, Hartmann said. The research was funded by the National Science Foundation.
In a blog post last month, Hartmann focused on the more recent winter of 2014-15 and argues that, once again, the root cause was surface temperatures in the tropical Pacific.
That pattern, which also causes the blob, seems to have become stronger since about 1980 and lately has elbowed out the Pacific Decadal Oscillation to become second only to El Niño in its influence on global weather patterns.
Its an interesting question if thats just natural variability happening or if theres something changing about how the Pacific Ocean decadal variability behaves, Hartmann said. I dont think we know the answer. Maybe it will go away quickly and we wont talk about it anymore, but if it persists for a third year, then well know something really unusual is going on.
Bond says that although the blob does not seem to be caused by climate change, it has many of the same effects for West Coast weather.
This is a taste of what the ocean will be like in future decades, Bond said. It wasnt caused by global warming, but its producing conditions that we think are going to be more common with global warming.
Thanks for the report. Sorry I don’t have any clever comebacks like the rest of these posters.
A weak spot in the earth’s magnetic field will allow solar and cosmic rays to deplete ozone in the same part of the ozone layer and hit the earth (and ocean) more to heat it more. Also, increased seismic activity (even more frequent light activity) might cause more methane leakage from the earth—methane that might pool in particular areas and cause similar anomalies.
We didn’t cause it, can’t stop it, and it won’t be the end of the world. But the various groups of political constituents sucking on debt/revenues for their salaries do publish whatever they can to get more of the pie from Uncle Samantha. Do you see?
They are going to blame the dying Pacific on Climate Change. Not the bioaccumulation of radioactive substances and their affects on marine animal immune systems. The warm water is caused by the high pressure system which is caused by the jet stream pattern. And it is just a minor increase caused by less evaporation and wind blockage due to the high pressure. Not even in the same league as a El Nino.
That movie theater is in Phoenixville PA on Bridge Street.
They’re renovating it now...
"Ridiculously Resilient Ridge"
God is not mocked.
Great shades of Johnny Cash and “Ring of Fire”.....
godzirra
I’m sure you’re right. Globulloney is much more lucrative than F’nshima. So many people to rob, so little time.
We had weird weather in New England this winter. It snowed and got very cold. The spring is weird as well. Rainy and chilly. I am sure the summer will bring weirdness in the form of hot August days and nights but who knows. Maybe it will be normal and we will have global average temperatures in August.
It’s not “El Nino”, or “La Nina”. It is “El Gordo”.
That Magnificent Bastard Karl Rove is at it again!
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