Pausata Francesco S R, Chafik Leon, Caballero Rodrigo, Battisti David S
Department of Meteorology, Stockholm University and Bolin Centre for Climate Research, 10691 Stockholm, Sweden;
Department of Meteorology, Stockholm University and Bolin Centre for Climate Research, 10691 Stockholm, Sweden; National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration/National Environmental Satellite, Data, and Information Service Center for Satellite Application and Research, College Park, MD 20740; Cooperative Institute for Climate and Satellites, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20740;
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2015 Nov 10;112(45):13784-8. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1509153112. Epub 2015 Oct 26.
Large volcanic eruptions can have major impacts on global climate, affecting both atmospheric and ocean circulation through changes in atmospheric chemical composition and optical properties. The residence time of volcanic aerosol from strong eruptions is roughly 2-3 y. Attention has consequently focused on their short-term impacts, whereas the long-term, ocean-mediated response has not been well studied. Most studies have focused on tropical eruptions; high-latitude eruptions have drawn less attention because their impacts are thought to be merely hemispheric rather than global. No study to date has investigated the long-term effects of high-latitude eruptions. Here, we use a climate model to show that large summer high-latitude eruptions in the Northern Hemisphere cause strong hemispheric cooling, which could induce an El Niño-like anomaly, in the equatorial Pacific during the first 8-9 mo after the start of the eruption. The hemispherically asymmetric cooling shifts the Intertropical Convergence Zone southward, triggering a weakening of the trade winds over the western and central equatorial Pacific that favors the development of an El Niño-like anomaly. In the model used here, the specified high-latitude eruption also leads to a strengthening of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) in the first 25 y after the eruption, followed by a weakening lasting at least 35 y. The long-lived changes in the AMOC strength also alter the variability of the El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO).
大规模火山喷发会对全球气候产生重大影响,通过改变大气化学成分和光学特性来影响大气和海洋环流。强烈火山喷发产生的火山气溶胶停留时间约为2至3年。因此,人们的注意力集中在它们的短期影响上,而长期的、由海洋介导的响应尚未得到充分研究。大多数研究集中在热带地区的火山喷发;高纬度地区的火山喷发受到的关注较少,因为人们认为它们的影响仅局限于半球而非全球范围。迄今为止,尚无研究调查过高纬度地区火山喷发的长期影响。在此,我们使用一个气候模型来表明,北半球夏季高纬度地区的大规模火山喷发会导致强烈的半球性降温,这可能在喷发开始后的前8至9个月内在赤道太平洋引发类似厄尔尼诺的异常现象。半球不对称降温使热带辐合带向南移动,引发赤道太平洋西部和中部信风减弱,有利于类似厄尔尼诺异常现象的发展。在本文所使用的模型中,特定的高纬度火山喷发还会导致喷发后的前25年内大西洋经向翻转环流(AMOC)增强,随后减弱,且至少持续35年。AMOC强度的长期变化也会改变厄尔尼诺 - 南方涛动(ENSO)的变率。