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Influence of Recent Climate Shifts on the Relationship Between ENSO and Asian Monsoon Precipitation Oxygen Isotope Ratios
Author(s) -
Cai Zhongyin,
Tian Lide,
Bowen Gabriel J.
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: atmospheres
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-8996
pISSN - 2169-897X
DOI - 10.1029/2019jd030383
Subject(s) - δ18o , climatology , precipitation , monsoon , wet season , east asian monsoon , bengal , el niño southern oscillation , dry season , isotopes of oxygen , environmental science , bay , teleconnection , stable isotope ratio , geography , oceanography , geology , meteorology , physics , cartography , geochemistry , quantum mechanics
Recent studies have revealed robust in‐phase relationships between El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and Asian Monsoon precipitation δ 18 O values (i.e., warm ENSO events with high δ 18 O values), and this relationship has been used in an attempt to reconstruct past ENSO activity. However, whether this relationship holds in the past is unknown. Here we use precipitation δ 18 O data from Hong Kong (East Asia) and Bangkok (Southeast Asia) and an ice core δ 18 O record from Dasuopu glacier (South Asia) to examine the δ 18 O‐ENSO relationship across two recent climate shifts that occurred during the winters of 1976/1977 and 1988/1989. On an annual scale, the δ 18 O‐ENSO relationship is weak prior to 1977 and strongest after 1988. We show that the changing δ 18 O‐ENSO relationship mainly originates from changes in the dry season isotope/climate relationship (which is significant only after 1988), whereas the rainy season relationship is relatively stable. We confirm that, consistent with earlier work on the rainy season, the significant δ 18 O‐ENSO relationship in the dry season post‐1988 is associated with ENSO's influence on regional convection (Bay of Bengal to South China Sea region). We suggest the insignificant dry season relationship prior to 1989 is due to limited ENSO impacts on convection in the Bay of Bengal to South China Sea region, which is supported by the insignificant relationship between ENSO and vertical velocity at 500 hPa. These findings suggest that without additional constraints, systematic variability in isotope/climate relationships will lead to large uncertainties in ENSO reconstructions based on Asian Monsoon region δ 18 O data.