North American climate in CMIP5 experiments. Part II: evaluation of historical simulations of intraseasonal to decadal variability

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Date
2013-12-01
Authors
Sheffield, Justin
Camargo, Suzana J.
Fu, Rong
Hu, Qi
Jiang, Xianan
Johnson, Nathaniel
Karnauskas, Kristopher B.
Kim, Seon Tae
Kinter, Jim
Kumar, Sanjiv
Langenbrunner, Baird
Maloney, Eric
Mariotti, Annarita
Meyerson, Joyce E.
Neelin, J. David
Nigam, Sumant
Pan, Zaitao
Ruiz-Barradas, Alfredo
Seager, Richard
Serra, Yolande L.
Sun, De-Zheng
Wang, Chunzai
Xie, Shang-Ping
Yu, Jin-Yi
Zhang, Tao
Zhao, Ming
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DOI
10.1175/JCLI-D-12-00593.1
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North America
Regional effects
Coupled models
Decadal variability
Interannual variability
Intraseasonal variability
Abstract
This is the second part of a three-part paper on North American climate in phase 5 of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP5) that evaluates the twentieth-century simulations of intraseasonal to multidecadal variability and teleconnections with North American climate. Overall, the multimodel ensemble does reasonably well at reproducing observed variability in several aspects, but it does less well at capturing observed teleconnections, with implications for future projections examined in part three of this paper. In terms of intraseasonal variability, almost half of the models examined can reproduce observed variability in the eastern Pacific and most models capture the midsummer drought over Central America. The multimodel mean replicates the density of traveling tropical synoptic-scale disturbances but with large spread among the models. On the other hand, the coarse resolution of the models means that tropical cyclone frequencies are underpredicted in the Atlantic and eastern North Pacific. The frequency and mean amplitude of ENSO are generally well reproduced, although teleconnections with North American climate are widely varying among models and only a few models can reproduce the east and central Pacific types of ENSO and connections with U.S. winter temperatures. The models capture the spatial pattern of Pacific decadal oscillation (PDO) variability and its influence on continental temperature and West Coast precipitation but less well for the wintertime precipitation. The spatial representation of the Atlantic multidecadal oscillation (AMO) is reasonable, but the magnitude of SST anomalies and teleconnections are poorly reproduced. Multidecadal trends such as the warming hole over the central–southeastern United States and precipitation increases are not replicated by the models, suggesting that observed changes are linked to natural variability.
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Author Posting. © American Meteorological Society, 2013. This article is posted here by permission of American Meteorological Society for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Journal of Climate 26 (2013): 9247–9290, doi:10.1175/JCLI-D-12-00593.1.
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Journal of Climate 26 (2013): 9247–9290
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