18 research outputs found
Reply to Comment on ‘On the relationship between Atlantic meridional overturning circulation slowdown and global surface warming’
In their comment on our paper (Caesar et al 2020 Environ. Res. Lett. 15 024003), Chen and Tung
(hereafter C&T) argue that our analysis, showing that over the last decades Atlantic meridional
overturning circulation (AMOC) strength and global mean surface temperature (GMST) were
positively correlated, is incorrect. Their claim is mainly based on two arguments, neither of which
is justified: first, C&T claim that our analysis is based on ‘established evidence’ that was only true
for preindustrial conditions—this is not the case. Using data from the modern period
(1947–2012), we show that the established understanding (i.e. deep-water formation in the North
Atlantic cools the deep ocean and warms the surface) is correct, but our analysis is not based on
this fact. Secondly, C&T claim that our results are based on a statistical analysis of only one cycle of
data which was furthermore incorrectly detrended. This, too, is not true. Our conclusion that a
weaker AMOC delays the current surface warming rather than enhances it, is based on several
independent lines of evidence. The data we show to support this covers more than one cycle and
the detrending (which was performed to avoid spurious correlations due to a common trend) does
not affect our conclusion: the correlation between AMOC strength and GMST is positive. We do
not claim that this is strong evidence that the two time series are in phase, but rather that this
means that the two time series are not anti-correlated
Recommended from our members
Network-based identification and characterization of teleconnections on different scales
Sea surface temperature (SST) patterns can – as surface climate forcing – affect weather and climate at large distances. One example is El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) that causes climate anomalies around the globe via teleconnections. Although several studies identified and characterized these teleconnections, our understanding of climate processes remains incomplete, since interactions and feedbacks are typically exhibited at unique or multiple temporal and spatial scales. This study characterizes the interactions between the cells of a global SST data set at different temporal and spatial scales using climate networks. These networks are constructed using wavelet multi-scale correlation that investigate the correlation between the SST time series at a range of scales allowing instantaneously deeper insights into the correlation patterns compared to traditional methods like empirical orthogonal functions or classical correlation analysis. This allows us to identify and visualise regions of – at a certain timescale – similarly evolving SSTs and distinguish them from those with long-range teleconnections to other ocean regions. Our findings re-confirm accepted knowledge about known highly linked SST patterns like ENSO and the Pacific Decadal Oscillation, but also suggest new insights into the characteristics and origins of long-range teleconnections like the connection between ENSO and Indian Ocean Dipole
An Overview of Ocean Climate Change Indicators: Sea Surface Temperature, Ocean Heat Content, Ocean pH, Dissolved Oxygen Concentration, Arctic Sea Ice Extent, Thickness and Volume, Sea Level and Strength of the AMOC (Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation)
Global ocean physical and chemical trends are reviewed and updated using seven
key ocean climate change indicators: (i) Sea Surface Temperature, (ii) Ocean Heat
Content, (iii) Ocean pH, (iv) Dissolved Oxygen concentration (v) Arctic Sea Ice extent,
thickness, and volume (vi) Sea Level and (vii) the strength of the Atlantic Meridional
Overturning Circulation (AMOC). The globally averaged ocean surface temperature
shows a mean warming trend of 0.062 ± 0.013 ºC per decade over the last 120 years
(1900–2019). During the last decade (2010–2019) the rate of ocean surface warming
has accelerated to 0.280 ± 0.068 ºC per decade, 4.5 times higher than the long term
mean. Ocean Heat Content in the upper 2,000 m shows a linear warming rate of
0.35 ± 0.08 Wm-2 in the period 1955–2019 (65 years). The warming rate during the
last decade (2010–2019) is twice (0.70 ± 0.07 Wm-2) the warming rate of the long term
record. Each of the last six decades have been warmer than the previous one. Global
surface ocean pH has declined on average by approximately 0.1 pH units (from 8.2
to 8.1) since the industrial revolution (1770). By the end of this century (2100) ocean
pH is projected to decline additionally by 0.1-0.4 pH units depending on the RCP
(Representative Concentration Pathway) and SSP (Shared Socioeconomic Pathways) future scenario. The time of emergence of the pH climate change signal varies from 8
to 15 years for open ocean sites, and 16-41 years for coastal sites. Global dissolved
oxygen levels have decreased by 4.8 petamoles or 2% in the last 5 decades, with
profound impacts on local and basin scale habitats. Regional trends are varying due to
multiple processes impacting dissolved oxygen: solubility change, respiration changes,
ocean circulation changes and multidecadal variability. Arctic sea ice extent has been
declining by -13.1% per decade in summer (September) and by -2.6% per decade
in winter (March) during the last 4 decades (1979–2020). The combined trends of sea
ice extent and sea ice thickness indicate that the volume of non-seasonal Arctic Sea
Ice has decreased by 75% since 1979. Global mean sea level has increased in the
period 1993–2019 (the altimetry era) at a mean rate of 3.15 0.3 mm year-1 and
is experiencing an acceleration of ~ 0.084 (0.06–0.10) mm year-2. During the last
century (1900–2015; 115y) global mean sea level (GMSL) has rised 19 cm, and near
40% of that GMSL rise has taken place since 1993 (22y). Independent proxies of the
evolution of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) indicate that AMOC
is at its weakest for several hundreds of years and has been slowing down during the
last century. A final visual summary of key ocean climate change indicators during the
recent decades is provided.Versión del edito
The evolution of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation and its implications for surface warming
The Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) is likely the most well-known system of ocean currents on Earth, redistributing heat, nutrients and carbon over a large part of the Earth’s surface and affecting global climate as a result. Due to enhanced freshwater fluxes into the subpolar North Atlantic as a response to global warming, the AMOC is expected, and may have already started, to weaken and these changes will likely have global impacts. It is therefore of considerable relevance to improve our understanding of past and future AMOC changes. My thesis tries to answer some of the open questions in this field by giving strong evidence that the AMOC has already weakened over the last century, by narrowing future projections of this slowdown and
by studying the impacts on global surface warming.
While there have been various studies trying to reconstruct the strength of the overturning circulation in the past, often based on model simulations in combination with observations (Jackson et al., 2016, Kanzow et al., 2010) or proxies (Frajka-Williams, 2015, Latif et al., 2006), the results so far, due to lack of direct measurements, have been inconclusive. In the first paper I build on previous work that links the anomalously low sea surface temperatures (SSTs) in the North Atlantic with the reduced meridional heat transport due to a weaker AMOC. Using the output of a high-resolution global climate model, I derive a characteristic spatial and seasonal SST fingerprint of an AMOC slowdown and an improved SST-based AMOC index. The same fingerprint is seen in
the observational SSTs since the late 19th Century, giving strong evidence that since then the AMOC has slowed down. In addition, the reconstruction of the historical overturning strength with the new AMOC index agrees well with and extends the results of earlier studies as well as the direct measurements from the RAPID project and shows a strong decline of the AMOC by about 15% (3±1 Sv) since the mid-20th Century (Caesar et al., 2018).
The reconstruction of the historical overturning strength with the AMOC index enables us to weight future AMOC projections based on their skill in modeling the historical AMOC as described in the second paper of this thesis (Olson et al., 2018). Using Bayesian model averaging we considerably narrow the projections of the CMIP5 ensemble to a decrease of -4.0 Sv and -6.8 Sv between the years 1960-1999 and 2060-2099 for the RCP4.5 and RCP8.5 emission scenarios, respectively. These values fit to, yet are at the lower end of, previously published estimates.
In the third paper I examine how the AMOC slowdown affects the global mean surface temperature (GMST) with a focus on how it will change the ocean heat uptake (OHC). Accounting for the effect of changes in the radiative forcing on the GMST, I test how AMOC variations correlate with the residual part of surface temperature changes in the past. I find that the correlation is positive which fits the understanding that the deep-water formation that is important in driving the AMOC cools the deep ocean and therefore warms the surface (Caesar et al., 2019). The future weakening of the overturning circulation could therefore delay global surface warming.
Due to nonlinear behavior and scale specific changes it can be difficult to study the dominant processes and modes that drive climate variability. In the fourth paper we develop and test a new technique based on the wavelet multiscale correlation (WMC) similarity measure to study climate variability on different temporal and spatial scales (Agarwal et al., 2018). In a fifth contribution to my thesis this method is applied to the observed sea surface temperatures. The results reconfirm well-known relations between SST anomalies such as the El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) on inter-annual and decadal timescales, respectively. They
furthermore give new insights into the characteristics and origins of long-range teleconnections, for example, that the teleconnection between ENSO and Indian Ocean dipole exist mainly between the northern part of the ENSO tongue and the equatorial Indian Ocean, and provides therefore valuable knowledge about the regions that are necessary to include when modeling regional climate variability at a certain scale (Agarwal et al., 2019).
In summary, my PhD thesis investigates past and future AMOC variability and its effects on global mean surface temperature by utilizing a combination of observational sea surface data and the output of historical and future climate model simulations from both the high-resolution CM2.6 model as well as the CMIP5 ensemble. It further includes the development and validation of a new method to study climate variability, that, applied to the observed sea surface temperatures, gives new insight about teleconnections in the Earth System. My findings provide evidence that the AMOC has already slowed down, will continue to do so in the future, and will impact the global mean temperature. Further impacts of an AMOC slowdown may include increased sea-level rise at the U.S. east coast (Ezer, 2015), heat extremes in Europe (Duchez et al., 2016) and increased storm activity in the North Atlantic region (Jackson et al., 2015), all of which have significant socio-economic implications
Can we trust projections of AMOC weakening based on climate models that cannot reproduce the past?
The Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC), a crucial element of the Earth's climate system, is projected to weaken over the course of the twenty-first century which could have far reaching consequences for the occurrence of extreme weather events, regional sea level rise, monsoon regions and the marine ecosystem. The latest IPCC report puts the likelihood of such a weakening as ‘very likely’. As our confidence in future climate projections depends largely on the ability to model the past climate, we take an in-depth look at the difference in the twentieth century evolution of the AMOC based on observational data (including direct observations and various proxy data) and model data from climate model ensembles. We show that both the magnitude of the trend in the AMOC over different time periods and often even the sign of the trend differs between observations and climate model ensemble mean, with the magnitude of the trend difference becoming even greater when looking at the CMIP6 ensemble compared to CMIP5. We discuss possible reasons for this observation-model discrepancy and question what it means to have higher confidence in future projections than historical reproductions.
This article is part of a discussion meeting issue 'Atlantic overturning: new observations and challenges'
On the relationship between Atlantic meridional overturning circulation slowdown and global surface warming
According to established understanding, deep-water formation in the North Atlantic and Southern
Ocean keeps the deep ocean cold, counter-acting the downward mixing of heat from the warmer
surface waters in the bulk of the world ocean. Therefore, periods of strong Atlantic meridional
overturning circulation (AMOC) are expected to coincide with cooling of the deep ocean and warming
of the surface waters. It has recently been proposed that this relation may have reversed due to global
warming, and that during the past decades a strong AMOC coincides with warming of the deep ocean
and relative cooling of the surface, by transporting increasingly warmer waters downward. Here we
present multiple lines of evidence, including a statistical evaluation of the observed global mean
temperature, ocean heat content, and different AMOC proxies, that lead to the opposite conclusion:
even during the current ongoing global temperature rise a strong AMOC warms the surface. The
observed weakening of the AMOC has therefore delayed global surface warming rather than
enhancing i
Wavelet-based multiscale similarity measure for complex networks
In recent years, complex network analysis facilitated the identification of universal and unexpected patterns in complex climate systems. However, the analysis and representation of a multiscale
complex relationship that exists in the global climate system are limited. A logical first step in addressing
this issue is to construct multiple networks over different timescales. Therefore, we propose to apply the
wavelet multiscale correlation (WMC) similarity measure, which is a combination of two state-of-the-art
methods, viz. wavelet and Pearson’s correlation, for investigating multiscale processes through complex
networks. Firstly we decompose the data over different timescales using the wavelet approach and subsequently construct a corresponding network by Pearson’s correlation. The proposed approach is illustrated
and tested on two synthetics and one real-world example. The first synthetic case study shows the efficacy
of the proposed approach to unravel scale-specific connections, which are often undiscovered at a single
scale. The second synthetic case study illustrates that by dividing and constructing a separate network for
each time window we can detect significant changes in the signal structure. The real-world example investigates the behavior of the global sea surface temperature (SST) network at different timescales. Intriguingly,
we notice that spatial dependent structure in SST evolves temporally. Overall, the proposed measure has
an immense potential to provide essential insights on understanding and extending complex multivariate
process studies at multiple scales
Current Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation weakest in last millennium
The Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC)—
one of Earth’s major ocean circulation systems—redistributes
heat on our planet and has a major impact on climate. Here, we
compare a variety of published proxy records to reconstruct
the evolution of the AMOC since about ad 400. A fairly consistent picture of the AMOC emerges: after a long and relatively
stable period, there was an initial weakening starting in the
nineteenth century, followed by a second, more rapid, decline
in the mid-twentieth century, leading to the weakest state of
the AMOC occurring in recent decades
Network-based identification and characterization of teleconnections on different scales
Sea surface temperature (SST) patterns can – as surface climate forcing – affect weather and climate
at large distances. One example is El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) that causes climate anomalies
around the globe via teleconnections. Although several studies identified and characterized these
teleconnections, our understanding of climate processes remains incomplete, since interactions
and feedbacks are typically exhibited at unique or multiple temporal and spatial scales. This study
characterizes the interactions between the cells of a global SST data set at different temporal and
spatial scales using climate networks. These networks are constructed using wavelet multi-scale
correlation that investigate the correlation between the SST time series at a range of scales allowing
instantaneously deeper insights into the correlation patterns compared to traditional methods like
empirical orthogonal functions or classical correlation analysis. This allows us to identify and visualise
regions of – at a certain timescale – similarly evolving SSTs and distinguish them from those with longrange
teleconnections to other ocean regions. Our findings re-confirm accepted knowledge about
known highly linked SST patterns like ENSO and the Pacific Decadal Oscillation, but also suggest new
insights into the characteristics and origins of long-range teleconnections like the connection between
ENSO and Indian Ocean Dipole