Abstract

Abstract Recent analysis of pantropical interactions suggests that after 1980 the tropical Atlantic Ocean’s (TAO) influence on the tropical Pacific Ocean (TPO) appears to have become much more pronounced while the tropical Indian Ocean’s (TIO) influence appears to have weakened. This study explores whether and how decadal changes in TAO and TPO SSTs modulate these pantropical connections in an attempt to explain the recent dominance of the TAO. To this end, we carry out a series of idealized atmosphere-only experiments using the ACCESS atmospheric general circulation model where the magnitude and sign of the decadal TAO SST signal are varied, presenting various warm and cool Atlantic scenarios. To understand further if these pantropical connections are influenced by changes in TPO SST, we carry out the above TAO experiments with both warm and cool phases of Pacific decadal variability (PDV). We find that an imposed TAO warming leads to increases in TPO atmospheric temperature and stability, which lead to a decrease in average TPO precipitation, with the most prominent changes occurring in June–August. These changes in TPO precipitation induced by TAO warming are largely mirrored when TAO cooling is added, whereas the TPO rainfall response to TAO anomalies remains relatively unchanged for the different phases of PDV. In contrast to the precipitation response, the wind response did display some asymmetries between different phases of TAO SST variability. Specifically, surface winds in the western half of the Niño-4 region exhibited a significantly different response to positive versus negative Atlantic multidecadal variability (AMV), whereas the surface winds in the western equatorial Pacific were significantly stronger (roughly 40% larger) in the positive phase of PDV than in the negative phase. These results suggest that the phases of PDV and AMV may modulate pantropical interactions through their effect on zonal wind stress.

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