Abstract

Abstract The impact of stochastic intraseasonal variability on the onset of the 1997/98 El Niño was examined using a large ensemble of forecasts starting on 1 December 1996, produced using the Australian Bureau of Meteorology Predictive Ocean Atmosphere Model for Australia (POAMA) seasonal forecast coupled model. This coupled model has a reasonable simulation of El Niño and the Madden–Julian oscillation, so it provides an ideal framework for investigating the interaction between the MJO and El Niño. The experiment was designed so that the ensemble spread was simply a result of internal stochastic variability that is generated during the forecast. For the initial conditions used here, all forecasts led to warm El Niño–type conditions with the amplitude of the warming varying from 0.5° to 2.7°C in the Niño-3.4 region. All forecasts developed an MJO event during the first 4 months, indicating that perhaps the background state favored MJO development. However, the details of the MJOs that developed during December 1996–March 1997 had a significant impact on the subsequent strength of the El Niño event. In particular, the forecasts with the initial MJOs that extended farther into the central Pacific, on average, led to a stronger El Niño, with the westerly winds in the western Pacific associated with the MJO leading the development of SST and thermocline anomalies in the central and eastern Pacific. These results imply a limit to the accuracy with which the strength of El Niño can be predicted because the details of individual MJO events matter. To represent realistic uncertainty, coupled models should be able to represent the MJO, including its propagation into the central Pacific so that forecasts produce sufficient ensemble spread.

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