The Relationship between California Rainfall and ENSO Events

  • Schonher T
  • Nicholson S
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Abstract

This paper examines the annual rainfall over California during 11 ENSO events within the period 1950 to 1982. During six of these, unusually wet conditions prevailed throughout California; conditions were near normal during five events; and in one extreme drought occurred statewide. A comparison with the ENSO classification scheme of Fu et al., based on SST patterns in the Pacific, shows an excellent correspondence. Type 1 year with large positive temperature anomalies east of the date line and lasting well into winter, are invariably events that enhance California rainfall. Normal years coincide with Type 2 ENSO events (moderate warming over a broad sector); the dry year is the sole Type 3 year, with weak anomalies confined to the eastern Pacific. This study also shows that the response to ENSO is regionally specific. Although throughout the state most years with extremely wet conditions are ENSO years, the tendency for an ENSO event to increase rainfall is greatest in southern California, where 9 of 11 events produced above-normal rainfall and 8 of the 10 wettest years was an ENSO year. The pattern is more complex in central California; there ENSO years are almost invariably ones with highly abnormal rainfall, but they may either be wet or dry. The areas least influenced by ENSO are the Sierra Nevada and northern California. The reasons for the geographical pattern of response become apparent when the seasonality and causes of rainfall in the various regions are evaluated

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Schonher, T., & Nicholson, S. E. (1989). The Relationship between California Rainfall and ENSO Events. Journal of Climate, 2(11), 1258–1269. https://doi.org/10.1175/1520-0442(1989)002<1258:trbcra>2.0.co;2

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