Abstract

Weather persistence from month to month is an important source of predictability on the intraseasonal time‐scale. Persistence in the lower troposphere is thought to be mainly due to dynamical feedbacks between the atmosphere and physical variables at or below the surface. Many recent improvements of dynamical seasonal forecasting models have been due to better initialisations and representations of the lower boundary. While many physical mechanisms that mediate persistence are well‐understood, they have not previously been considered simultaneously in a causal framework. Here we use linear methods that are widely used in the field of causal inference in statistics to identify mediators between persistent near‐surface temperature anomalies from one month to the next. The variables considered are soil temperature and soil moisture at four levels, and snow depth. In Northern Europe, the high persistence of temperature in summer is shown to be mediated mainly by soil temperature anomalies. The high persistence in winter is mediated by snow depth and soil moisture in addition to soil temperature. The annual cycles of persistence are also investigated for the mid‐ and high latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere, confirming the important role of soil temperature in summer. Snow depth is an important mediator when, and where, its interannual variability is large: in winter at midlatitudes and in spring and autumn at high latitudes. The novel contribution of this study is the introduction of a linear causal methodology and a holistic approach that allows quantification and comparison of the different roles of soil variables and snow depth in mediating near‐surface temperature persistence.

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