El-Nino, La-Nina, ENSO, El Nino Modoki

Kamal
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 In this article, You will read El-Nino, La-Nina, ENSO, El Nino Modoki, Madden-Julian Oscillation (MJO) – for UPSC (Geography).

El-Nino and La Niña are opposite phases of what is known as the El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) cycle. The ENSO is a recurring climatic pattern involving temperature changes in the waters of the eastern and central tropical Pacific Ocean, and changes in the patterns of upper and lower-level winds, sea level pressure, and tropical rainfall across the Pacific Basin.

El Nino is often called the warm phase and La Nina is called the cold phase of ENSO. These deviations from the normal surface temperatures can have a large-scale impact on the global weather conditions and overall climate.


El Nino

The phrase “El Niño” refers to the Christ Child and was coined by fishermen along the coasts of Ecuador and Peru to describe the warming of the central and eastern pacific.

  • El Niño is the name given to the occasional development of warm ocean surface waters along the coast of Ecuador and PeruEl Niño events occur irregularly at intervals of 27 years, although the average is about once every 3-4 years.
  • When this warming occurs the usual upwelling of cold, nutrient-rich deep ocean water is significantly reduced.
  • El Niño normally occurs around Christmas and usually lasts for a few weeks to a few months.
  • Sometimes an extremely warm event can develop that lasts for much longer time periods. In the 1990s, strong El Niños developed in 1991 and lasted until 1995, and from fall 1997 to spring 1998.

Normal Conditions

  • In a normal year, a surface low pressure develops in the region of northern Australia and Indonesia and a high-pressure system over the coast of Peru. As a result, the trade winds over the Pacific Ocean move strongly from east to west.
  • The easterly flow of the trade winds carries warm surface waters westward, bringing convective storms (thunderstorms) to Indonesia and coastal Australia. Along the coast of Peru, cold bottom cold nutrient-rich water wells up to the surface to replace the warm water that is pulled to the west.
El-Nino
El-Nino
El nino neutral conditions

Walker circulation (Occurs during Normal Years)

  • The Walker circulation (walker cell) is caused by the pressure gradient force that results from a high pressure system over the eastern Pacific ocean, and a low pressure system over Indonesia.
walker cell

This cross-section of the Pacific Ocean, along the equator, illustrates the pattern of atmospheric circulation typically found at the equatorial Pacific. Note the position of the thermocline.

  • Thermocline == noun a temperature gradient in a lake or other body of water, separating layers at different temperatures.
  • The Walker cell is indirectly related to upwelling off the coasts of Peru and Ecuador. This brings nutrient-rich cold water to the surface, increasing fishing stocks.

halocline is most commonly confused with a thermocline – a thermocline is an area within a body of water that marks a drastic change in temperature. A halocline can coincide with a thermocline and form a pycnocline. The pycnocline encompasses both the halocline (salinity gradients) and the thermocline (temperature gradients) refers to the rapid change in density with depth. Haloclines are common in water-filled limestone caves near the ocean.

halocline

During El Nino year

  • In an El Niño year, air pressure drops over large areas of the central Pacific and along the coast of South America.
  • The normal low-pressure system is replaced by a weak high in the western Pacific (the southern oscillation). This change in pressure pattern causes the trade winds to be reduced == Weak Walker Cell. Sometimes Walker Cell might even get reversed.
  • This reduction allows the equatorial counter current (current along doldrums) to accumulate warm ocean water along the coastlines of Peru and Ecuador.
El Nino in pacific ocean
walker cell during el nino conditions
  • This accumulation of warm water causes the thermocline to drop in the eastern part of the Pacific Ocean which cuts off the upwelling of cold deep ocean water along the coast of Peru.
  • Climatically, the development of an El Niño brings drought to the western Pacificrains to the equatorial coast of South America, and convective storms and hurricanes to the central Pacific.

Effects of El Nino

  • The warmer waters had a devastating effect on marine life existing off the coast of Peru and Ecuador.
  • Fish catches off the coast of South America were lower than in the normal year (Because there is no upwelling).
  • Severe droughts occur in Australia, Indonesia, India, and southern Africa.
  • Heavy rains in California, Ecuador, and the Gulf of Mexico.

How El Nino impacts monsoon rainfall in India

  • El Nino and Indian monsoons are inversely related.
  • The most prominent droughts in India – six of them – since 1871 have been El Nino droughts, including the recent ones in 2002 and 2009
  • However, not all El Nino years led to a drought in India. For instance, 1997/98 was a strong El Nino year but there was no drought (Because of IOD).
  • On the other hand, a moderate El Nino in 2002 resulted in one of the worst droughts.
  • El Nino directly impacts India’s agrarian economy as it tends to lower the production of summer crops such as rice, sugarcane, cotton, and oilseeds.
  • The ultimate impact is seen in the form of high inflation and low gross domestic product growth as agriculture contributes around 14 percent of the Indian economy.

El Nino Southern Oscillation [ENSO]

  • The formation of an El Niño [Circulation of Water] is linked with Pacific Ocean circulation pattern known as the southern oscillation [circulation of atmospheric pressure]
  • Southern Oscillation, in oceanography and climatology, is a coherent inter-annual fluctuation of atmospheric pressure over the tropical Indo-Pacific region.
  • El Nino and Southern Oscillation coincide most of the times hence their combination is called ENSO – El Nino Southern Oscillation.

Only El Nino == [Warm water in Eastern Pacific + Cold water in Western Pacific].

Only SO == [Low Pressure over Eastern Pacific + High Pressure over Western Pacific]

ENSO = [Warm water in Eastern Pacific + Low Pressure over Eastern Pacific] + [Cold water in Western Pacific + High Pressure over Western Pacific].

Southern Oscillation Index and Indian Monsoons

  • SO is a see-saw pattern of meteorological changes observed between the Eastern Pacific and Western Pacific.
  • When the Pressure was high over the equatorial Eastern Pacific, it was low over the equatorial Western Pacific and vice versa.
  • The pattern of low and high pressures gives rise to vertical circulation along the equator with its rising limb over the low-pressure area and descending limb over the high-pressure area. This is known as Walker Circulation.
  • The location of low pressure and hence the rising limb over the Western Pacific is considered to be conducive to good monsoon rainfall in India.
  • It’s shifting eastward from its normal position, such as in El Nino years, reduces monsoon rainfall in India.
  • Due to the close association between an El Nino (E.N.) and the Southern Oscillation SO the two are jointly referred to as an ENSO event.
  • The Periodicity of SO is not fixed and its period varies from two to five years.
  • Southern Oscillation Index (SOD) is used to measure the intensity of the Southern Oscillation.
  • This is the difference in pressure between Tahiti in French Polynesia (Central Pacific), representing the Central Pacific Ocean, and Port Darwin, in northern Australia representing the Eastern Pacific Ocean.
  • The positive and negative values of the SOI i.e. Tahiti minus the Port Darwin pressure are pointers towards good or bad rainfall in India.

Indian Ocean Dipole effect (Not every El Nino year is same in India)

  • Although ENSO was statistically effective in explaining several past droughts in India, in recent decades the ENSO-Monsoon relationship seemed to weaken in the Indian subcontinent. For e.g. 1997, strong ENSO failed to cause drought in India.
  • However, it was later discovered that just like ENSO was an event in the Pacific Ocean, a similar seesaw ocean-atmosphere system in the Indian Ocean was also at play. It was discovered in 1999 and named the Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD).
  • The Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) is defined by the difference in sea surface temperature between two areas (or poles, hence a dipole) – a western pole in the Arabian Sea (western Indian Ocean) and an eastern pole in the eastern Indian Ocean south of Indonesia.
  • IOD develops in the equatorial region of the Indian Ocean from April to May and peaks in October.
  • With Positive IOD winds over the Indian Ocean blow from east to west (from Bay of Bengal towards the Arabian Sea). This results in the Arabian Sea (the western Indian Ocean near the African Coast) being much warmer and the eastern Indian Ocean around Indonesia becoming colder and dry.
  • In the negative dipole year (negative IOD), the reverse happens to make Indonesia much warmer and rainier.
Indian-Ocean-Dipole-effect
  • It was demonstrated that a positive IOD index often negated the effect of ENSO, resulting in increased Monsoon rains in several ENSO years like 1983, 1994, and 1997.
  • Further, it was shown that the two poles of the IOD – the eastern pole (around Indonesia) and the western pole (off the African coast) were independently and cumulatively affecting the quantity of rains for the Monsoon in the Indian subcontinent.
  • Similar to ENSO, the atmospheric component of the IOD was later discovered and named as Equatorial Indian Ocean Oscillation [EQUINOO][Oscillation of warm water and atmospheric pressure between the Bay of Bengal and the Arabian Sea].

Impact on IOD on Cyclonogeneis in Northern Indian Ocean

  • Positive IOD (Arabian Sea warmer than the Bay of Bengal) results in more cyclones than usual in the Arabian Sea.
  • Negative IOD results in stronger than usual cyclogenesis (Formation of Tropical Cyclones) in the Bay of Bengal. Cyclogenesis in the Arabian Sea is suppressed.

The El Niño Modoki

  • El Niño Modoki is a coupled ocean-atmosphere phenomenon in the tropical Pacific.
  • It is different from another coupled phenomenon in the tropical Pacific namely, El Niño.
  • Conventional El Niño is characterized by strong anomalous warming in the eastern equatorial Pacific.
  • Whereas, El Niño Modoki is associated with strong anomalous warming in the central tropical Pacific and cooling in the eastern and western tropical Pacific (see figure below).
El Nino la nina el nino modoki la nina modoki
el nino modoki walker cell

El Niño Modoki Impacts

  • The El Niño Modoki phenomenon is characterized by the anomalously warm central equatorial Pacific flanked by anomalously cool regions in both west and east.
  • Such zonal gradients result in anomalous two-cell Walker Circulation over the tropical Pacific, with a wet region in the central Pacific.

La Nina

  • After an El Niño event weather conditions usually return back to normal.
  • However, in some years the trade winds can become extremely strong and an abnormal accumulation of cold water can occur in the central and eastern Pacific. This event is called La Niña.
  • A strong La Niña occurred in 1988 and scientists believe that it may have been responsible for the summer drought over central North America. During this period, the Atlantic Ocean has seen very active hurricane seasons in 1998 and 1999.
  • One of the hurricanes that developed, named Mitch, was the strongest October hurricane ever to develop in about 100 years of record keeping.
La-Nina-walker-cell

Effects of La Nina

Some of the other weather effects of La Niña include

  • La Niña is characterized by lower-than-normal air pressure over the western Pacific. These low-pressure zones contribute to increased rainfall.
    • abnormally heavy monsoons in India and Southeast Asia,
    • cool and wet winter weather in southeastern Africa, wet weather in eastern Australia,
    • cold winter in western Canada and the northwestern United States,
    • winter drought in the southern United States.
  • La Niña conditions enhance the rainfall associated with the Southwest monsoon, it has a negative impact on rainfall associated with the Northeast monsoon.
  • Rainfall associated with the summer monsoon in Southeast Asia tends to be greater than normal, especially in northwest India and Bangladesh. This generally benefits the Indian economy, which depends on the monsoon for agriculture and industry.
  • Strong La Niña events are associated with catastrophic floods in northern Australia.
  • La Niña events are also associated with rainier-than-normal conditions are over southeastern Africa and northern Brazil.
  • Drier-than-normal conditions are observed along the west coast of tropical South America, the Gulf Coast of the United States, and the pampas region of southern South America.
  • La Niña usually has a positive impact on the fishing industry of western South America. Upwelling brings cold, nutrient-rich waters to the surface. Nutrients include plankton eaten by fish and crustaceans.

Madden-Julian Oscillation (MJO)

MaddenJulian oscillation (MJO) is the largest element of the intra-seasonal variability in the tropical atmosphere.

Madden-Julian Oscillation (MJO) is an oceanic-atmospheric phenomenon which affects weather activities across the globe. It brings major fluctuation in tropical weather on weekly to monthly timescales.

The MJO can be characterized as an eastward moving ‘pulse’ of cloud and rainfall near the equator that typically recurs every 30 to 60 days.

It’s a traversing phenomenon and is most prominent over the Indian and Pacific Oceans.

Phases of Madden-Julian Oscillation

  • The MJO consists of two parts or phasesStrong MJO activity often dissects the planet into halves. One half within the enhanced convective phase and the other half in the suppressed convective phase.
    • Enhanced rainfall (or convective) phase: winds at the surface converge, and the air is pushed up throughout the atmosphere. At the top of the atmosphere, the winds reverse (i.e., diverge). Such rising air motion in the atmosphere tends to increase condensation and rainfall.
    • Suppressed rainfall phase: winds converge at the top of the atmosphereforcing air to sink and, later, to diverge at the surface. As air sinks from high altitudes, it warms and dries, which suppresses rainfall.
  • It is this entire dipole structure, that moves west to east with time in the Tropics, causing more cloudiness, rainfall, and even storminess in the enhanced convective phase, and more sunshine and dryness in the suppressed convective phase.
madden julian oscillation upsc

How Does MJO Affect Indian Monsoon?

  • The Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD), El Nino, and MJO are all oceanic and atmospheric phenomena, which affect weather on a large scale. IOD only pertains to the Indian Oceanbut the other two affect weather on a global scale-up to the mid-latitudes.
  • IOD and El Nino remain over their respective positions, while MJO is a traversing phenomenon.
  • The journey of MJO goes through eight phases.
    • When it is over the Indian Ocean during the Monsoon seasonit brings good rainfall over the Indian subcontinent.
    • On the other hand, when it witnesses a longer cycle and stays over the Pacific Ocean, MJO brings bad news for the Indian Monsoon.
  • It is linked with enhanced and suppressed rainfall activity in the tropics and is very important for the Indian monsoonal rainfall.
  • Periodicity of MJO:
    • If it is nearly 30 days then it brings good rainfall during the Monsoon season.
    • If it is above 40 days then MJO doesn’t give good showers and could even lead to a dry Monsoon.
    • Shorter the cycle of MJO, better the Indian Monsoon. Simply because it then visits the Indian Ocean more often during the four-month-long period.
  • The presence of MJO over the Pacific Ocean along with an El Nino is detrimental for Monsoon rains.


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