Summer precipitation anomalies in Asia and North America induced by Eurasian non-monsoon land heating versus ENSO

  • Ping Zhao
  • , Bin Wang
  • , Jiping Liu
  • , Xiuji Zhou
  • , Junming Chen
  • , Sulan Nan
  • , Ge Liu
  • , Dong Xiao

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

22 Scopus citations

Abstract

When floods ravage Asian monsoon regions in summer, megadroughts often attack extratropical North America, which feature an intercontinental contrasting precipitation anomaly between Asia and North America. However, the characteristics of the contrasting Asian-North American (CANA) precipitation anomalies and associated mechanisms have not been investigated specifically. In this article, we firmly establish this summer CANA pattern, providing evidence for a significant effect of the land surface thermal forcing over Eurasian non-monsoon regions on the CANA precipitation anomalies by observations and numerical experiments. We show that the origin of the CANA precipitation anomalies and associated anomalous anticyclones over the subtropical North Pacific and Atlantic has a deeper root in Eurasian non-monsoon land surface heating than in North American land surface heating. The ocean forcing from the ENSO is secondary and tends to be confined in the tropics. Our results have strong implications to interpretation of the feedback of global warming on hydrological cycle over Asia and North America. Under the projected global warming due to the anthropogenic forcing, the prominent surface warming over Eurasian non-monsoon regions is a robust feature which, through the mechanism discussed here, would favor a precipitation increase over Asian monsoon regions and a precipitation decrease over extratropical North America.

Original languageEnglish
Article number21346
JournalScientific Reports
Volume6
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 26 2016
Externally publishedYes

Funding

This work was jointly supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (91437218) and by the Third Tibetan Plateau Atmospheric Scientific Experiment (GYHY201406001). BW acknowledges support from Global Research Laboratory (GRL) Program of the National Research Foundation of Korea grant #2011-0021927. JL is supported by the NOAA Climate Variability and Predictability Program (NA15OAR4310163). This is the Earth System Modeling Center publication No 88. We also thank Dr. Feifei Jin in University of Hawaii at Manoa for his constructive comments on this study.

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