Abstract

AbstractIndian Ocean (IO) dynamics impact ENSO predictability by influencing wind and precipitation anomalies in the Pacific. To test if the upstream influence of the IO improves ENSO validation statistics, a combination of forced ocean, atmosphere, and coupled models are utilized. In one experiment, the full tropical Indo‐Pacific region atmosphere is forced by observed interannual SST anomalies. In the other, the IO is forced by climatological SST. Differences between these two forced atmospheric model experiments spotlight a much richer wind response pattern in the Pacific than previous studies that used idealized forcing and simple linear atmospheric models. Weak westerlies are found near the equator similar to earlier literature. However, at initialization strong easterlies between 30°S–10°S and 0°N–25°N and equatorial convergence of the meridional winds across the entire Pacific are unique findings from this paper. The large‐scale equatorial divergence west of the dateline and northeasterly‐to‐northwesterly cross‐equatorial flow converging on the equator east of the dateline in the Pacific are generated from interannual IO SST coupling. In addition, off‐equatorial downwelling curl impacts large‐scale oceanic waves (i.e., Rossby waves reflect as western boundary Kelvin waves). After 3 months, these downwelling equatorial Kelvin waves propagate across the Pacific and strengthen the NINO3 SST. Eventually Bjerknes feedbacks take hold in the eastern Pacific which allows this warm anomaly to grow. Coupled forecasts for NINO3 SST anomalies for 1993–2014 demonstrate that including interannual IO forcing significantly improves predictions for 3–9 month lead times.

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