Abstract
A decadal change in the character of ENSO was observed around year 2000 toward weaker-amplitude, higher-frequency events with an increased occurrence of central Pacific El Niños. Here these changes are assessed in terms of the Bjerknes stability index (BJ index), which is a measure of the growth rate of ENSOrelated SST anomalies. The individual terms of the index are calculated from ocean reanalysis products separately for the time periods 1980-99 and 2000-10. The spread between the products is large, but they show a robust weakening of the thermocline feedback due to a reduced thermocline slope response to anomalous zonal wind stress as well as a weakened wind stress response to eastern equatorial Pacific SST anomalies. These changes are consistent with changes in the background state of the tropical Pacific: cooler mean SST in the eastern and central equatorial Pacific results in reduced convection there together with a westward shift in the ascending branch of the Walker circulation. This shift leads to a weakening in the relationship between eastern Pacific SST and longitudinally averaged equatorial zonal wind stress. Also, despite a steeper mean thermocline slope in the more recent period, the thermocline slope response to wind stress anomalies weakened due to a smaller zonal wind fetch that results from ENSO-related wind anomalies being more confined to the western basin. As a result, the total BJ index is more negative, corresponding to a more strongly damped system in the past decade compared to the 1980s and 1990s. © 2014 American Meteorological Society.
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CITATION STYLE
Lübbecke, J. F., & Mcphaden, M. J. (2014). Assessing the twenty-first-century shift in enso variability in terms of the bjerknes stability index. Journal of Climate, 27(7), 2577–2587. https://doi.org/10.1175/JCLI-D-13-00438.1
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