Spatiotemporal variability of ENSO and SST teleconnections to summer drought over the United States during the twentieth century

Publication Type  Journal Article
Year of Publication  2000
Authors  Rajagopalan, B.; Cook, E.; Lall, U.; Ray, B. K.
Journal Title  Journal of Climate
Volume  13
Issue  24
Pages  4244-4255
ISBN Number  0894-8755
Accession Number  ISI:000165989100002
Key Words  nino southern oscillation; intraseasonal extreme rainfall; north-atlantic oscillation; sea-level pressure; el-nino; surface-temperature; interdecadal variability; interannual variability; precipitation regime; decadal variability
Abstract  

Presented are investigations into the spatial structure of teleconnections between both the winter El Nino-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and global sea surface temperatures (SSTs), and a measure of continental U.S. summer drought during the twentieth century. Potential nonlinearities and nonstationarities in the relationships are noted. During the first three decades of this century, summer drought teleconnections in response to SST patterns linked to ENSO are found to be strongest in the southern regions of Texas, with extensions into regions of the Midwest. From the 1930s through the 1950s, the drought teleconnection pattern is found to extend into southern Arizona. The most recent three decades show weak teleconnections between summer drought over southern Texas and Arizona, and winter SSTs, which is consistent with previous findings. Instead, the response to Pacific SSTs shows a clear shift to the western United States and southern regions of California. These epochal variations are consistent with epochal variations observed in ENSO and other low-frequency climate indicators. This changing teleconnection response complicates statistical forecasting of drought.

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