4.5 Article

Potential impacts of East Asian winter monsoon on climate variability and predictability in the Australian summer monsoon region

Journal

THEORETICAL AND APPLIED CLIMATOLOGY
Volume 101, Issue 1-2, Pages 161-177

Publisher

SPRINGER WIEN
DOI: 10.1007/s00704-009-0246-2

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Australian Greenhouse Office
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [40830957]

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This study explores potential impacts of the East Asian winter monsoon (EAWM) on summer climate variability and predictability in the Australia-Asian region through Australia-Asia (A-A) monsoon interactions. Observational analysis is conducted for the period of 1959 to 2001 using ERA-40 wind reanalysis and Climate Research Unit rainfall and surface temperature monthly datasets. Statistically significant correlations are established between the Australian summer monsoon and its rainfall variations with cross-equatorial flows penetrating from South China Sea region and northerly flow in the EAWM. The underlying mechanism for such connections is the response of the position and intensity of Hardley circulation to strong/weak EAWM. A strong EAWM is associated with an enhanced cross-equatorial flow crossing the maritime continent and a strengthened Australia summer monsoon westerlies which affect rainfall and temperature variations in northern and eastern part of the Australian continent. Furthermore, partial correlation analysis, which largely excludes El Nio-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) effects, suggests that these connections are the inherent features in the monsoon system. This is further supported by analyzing a global model experiment using persistent sea surface temperatures (SSTs) which, without any SST interannual variations, shows similar patterns as in the observational analysis. Furthermore, such interaction could potentially affect climate predictability in the region, as shown by some statistically significant lag correlations at monthly time scale. Such results are attributed to the impacts of EAWM on regional SST variations and its linkage to surface conditions in the Eurasian continent. Finally, such impacts under global warmed climate are discussed by analyzing ten IPCC AR4 models and results suggest they still exist in the warmed climate even though the EAWM tends to be weaker.

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