Cold tongue/Warm pool and ENSO dynamics in the Pliocene
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2011
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It has been suggested that a “permanent” El Ni˜no climate state has existed in the warm Pliocene. One of the main pieces of evidence of such conditions is the small eastwest sea surface temperature (SST) difference that is found in proxy temperature records of the equatorial Pacific. Using a coupled version of the Zebiak-Cane model of intermediate complexity for the tropical Pacific, we study the sensitivity of the time-mean Pacific background state and El Ni˜no/Southern Oscillation (ENSO) variability to Pliocene climate changes. The parameters varied in this sensitivity study include changes in the trade wind strength due to a reduced equator-to-pole temperature gradient, higher global mean temperatures and an open Panama gateway. All these changes lead to a westward shift of the position of the cold tongue along the equator by up to 2000 km. This result is consistent with data from the PRISM3D Pliocene SST reconstruction. Our model further suggests that ENSO variability is present in the Pliocene climate with only slight changes as compared to today. A background climate that would resemble a “permanent” El Ni˜no with weak to no east-west temperature difference along the equator is only found for very weak trade winds which seem unrealistic for the Pliocene climate.
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von der Heydt, A S, Nnafie, A & Dijkstra, H A 2011, 'Cold tongue/Warm pool and ENSO dynamics in the Pliocene', Climate of the Past, vol. 7, pp. 903-915. https://doi.org/10.5194/cp-7-903-2011