In early March, the strongest wave of tropical convection ever measured (known as the Madden Julian Oscillation)
by modern meteorology moved into the western Pacific from Indonesian
waters bringing an outbreak of 3 tropical cyclones, including deadly
category 5 Pam which ravaged the south Pacific islands of Vanuatu. This
extreme outburst of tropical storms and organized thunderstorms pulled
strong westerly winds across the equator, unleashing a huge surge of
warm water below the ocean surface. Normally, trade winds blow warm
water across the Pacific from the Americas to Australia and Indonesia,
pushing up sea level in the west Pacific. When the trade winds suddenly
reversed to strong westerlies, it was as if a dam burst, but on the
scale of the earth's largest ocean, the Pacific. The front edge of that
massive equatorial wave, called a Kelvin wave, is now coming ashore on
the Americas.
Last year the largest Kelvin wave ever seen in the Pacific ocean
developed in February. After it came ashore and the surge of warm water
moved up the Pacific coast, the upwelling of nutrient rich cold water
dramatically slowed, and marine life began starving up and down the coast of north America. As the warm water moved north from the equator it merged with an enormous mass of warm stagnant water dubbed "the blob"
which had built up in the central north Pacific ocean under the mound
of high barometric pressure known as the Pacific high. Because the
Pacific high had expanded north of its normal position, possibly because
of climate change, warm, stagnant low nutrient water covered a large
percentage of the surface of the north Pacific ocean. READ MORE
Detailed research in California has found that nutrient upwelling was at a minimum in the El Nino year of 1992 and the super El Nino year of 1998.
A huge surge of warm water from an enormous deep equatorial wave called
a Kelvin wave is now hitting the west coast of the Americas. A wave of
similar size struck last year brought a massive marine die off to the
west coast, but this year's die offs will likely be global because
climate models are predicting a super El Nino. Credit NOAA.
No comments:
Post a Comment