Contrasting ENSO transition complexities between El Niño and La Niña:
The underlying complexity dynamics and future changes
Abstract
An ENSO event can transition from one event to another in complex ways.
An El Niño (La Niña) event can be preceded by a La Niña (El Niño) event
to become a cyclic ENSO, by a neutral event to become an episodic ENSO,
or by another El Niño (La Niña) event to become a multi-year ENSO. We
find that the observed El Niño and La Niña exhibit different
complexities in their event-to-event transition patterns. The El Niño is
dominated in order by episodic, cyclic, and multi-year transitions, but
the reversed order is found in the La Niña. This difference in the
transition complexity arises from a subtropical Pacific forcing
mechanism that triggers ENSO events. Using observational analyses and
forced atmospheric model experiments, we show that a preceding ENSO
event can activate a subtropical Pacific forcing mechanism to trigger
another ENSO event during the following year. These tropical-subtropical
Pacific interactions result in a cyclic ENSO transition if the two ENSO
events are of opposite signs or a multi-year ENSO transition if they are
of the same sign. The preceding ENSO event should excite deep
convections in the tropical Pacific in order to activate the subtropical
Pacific mechanism. This requirement enables mean temperatures in the
cold tongue and warm pool to respectively control how easily the cyclic
and multi-year transitions can occur. This mean state control enables
the subtropical Pacific forcing mechanism to result in more multi-year
transitions for La Niña than El Niño and more episodic transitions for
El Niño than La Niña. Furthermore, a future warmer tropical Pacific is
projected to decrease the frequency of occurrence of multi-year ENSO
transitions but increase the occurrence of cyclic ENSO transitions.. We
find that the CMIP5 and CMIP6 models can reproduce the transition
complexity for El Niño but not for La Niña. The models tend to produce
too many episodic La Niña events and too few multi-year La Niña events.
We are able to link the former deficiency to a weaker than observed
subtropical Pacific forcing mechanism in the CMIP5/6 models and the
latter to a cold bias in mean state SSTs in the equatorial Pacific in
the CMIP5/6 models. To achieve better simulations of ENSO transition
complexity, further efforts are to improve the model deficiencies in
simulating the SP-onset mechanism and mean SSTs in the equatorial
Pacific.