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    Revisiting the Leading Drivers of Pacific Coastal Drought Variability in the Contiguous United States

    Source: Journal of Climate:;2017:;volume( 031 ):;issue: 001::page 25
    Author:
    Cook, Benjamin I.;Williams, A. Park;Mankin, Justin S.;Seager, Richard;Smerdon, Jason E.;Singh, Deepti
    DOI: 10.1175/JCLI-D-17-0172.1
    Publisher: American Meteorological Society
    Abstract: AbstractCoastal droughts that simultaneously affect California, Oregon, and Washington are rare, but they have extensive and severe impacts (e.g., wildfire and agriculture). To better understand these events, historical observations are used to investigate 1) drought variability along the Pacific coast of the contiguous United States and 2) years when extreme drought affects the entire coast. The leading pattern of cold-season (October?March) precipitation variability along the Pacific coast favors spatially coherent moisture anomalies, accounting for >40% of the underlying variance, and is forced primarily by internal atmospheric dynamics. This contrasts with a much weaker dipole mode (~20% of precipitation variability) characterized by antiphased moisture anomalies across 40°N and strong correlations with tropical Pacific sea surface temperatures (SSTs). Sixteen coastal-wide summer droughts occurred from 1895 to 2016 (clustering in the 1920s?1930s and post-2000), events most strongly linked with the leading precipitation mode and internal atmospheric variability. The frequency of landfalling atmospheric rivers south of 40°N is sharply reduced during coastal droughts but not north of this boundary, where their frequency is more strongly influenced by the dipole. The lack of a consistent pattern of SST forcing during coastal droughts suggests little potential for skillful seasonal predictions. However, their tendency to cluster in time and the impact of warming during recent droughts may help inform decadal and longer-term drought risks.
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      Revisiting the Leading Drivers of Pacific Coastal Drought Variability in the Contiguous United States

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    contributor authorCook, Benjamin I.;Williams, A. Park;Mankin, Justin S.;Seager, Richard;Smerdon, Jason E.;Singh, Deepti
    date accessioned2018-01-03T11:01:52Z
    date available2018-01-03T11:01:52Z
    date copyright9/26/2017 12:00:00 AM
    date issued2017
    identifier otherjcli-d-17-0172.1.pdf
    identifier urihttp://138.201.223.254:8080/yetl1/handle/yetl/4246283
    description abstractAbstractCoastal droughts that simultaneously affect California, Oregon, and Washington are rare, but they have extensive and severe impacts (e.g., wildfire and agriculture). To better understand these events, historical observations are used to investigate 1) drought variability along the Pacific coast of the contiguous United States and 2) years when extreme drought affects the entire coast. The leading pattern of cold-season (October?March) precipitation variability along the Pacific coast favors spatially coherent moisture anomalies, accounting for >40% of the underlying variance, and is forced primarily by internal atmospheric dynamics. This contrasts with a much weaker dipole mode (~20% of precipitation variability) characterized by antiphased moisture anomalies across 40°N and strong correlations with tropical Pacific sea surface temperatures (SSTs). Sixteen coastal-wide summer droughts occurred from 1895 to 2016 (clustering in the 1920s?1930s and post-2000), events most strongly linked with the leading precipitation mode and internal atmospheric variability. The frequency of landfalling atmospheric rivers south of 40°N is sharply reduced during coastal droughts but not north of this boundary, where their frequency is more strongly influenced by the dipole. The lack of a consistent pattern of SST forcing during coastal droughts suggests little potential for skillful seasonal predictions. However, their tendency to cluster in time and the impact of warming during recent droughts may help inform decadal and longer-term drought risks.
    publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
    titleRevisiting the Leading Drivers of Pacific Coastal Drought Variability in the Contiguous United States
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume31
    journal issue1
    journal titleJournal of Climate
    identifier doi10.1175/JCLI-D-17-0172.1
    journal fristpage25
    journal lastpage43
    treeJournal of Climate:;2017:;volume( 031 ):;issue: 001
    contenttypeFulltext
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    DSpace software copyright © 2002-2015  DuraSpace
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