North Pacific ocean–atmosphere responses to Holocene and future warming drive Southwest US drought
Metadatos
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Todd, Victoria L.; Shanahan, T.M.; DiNezio, P.N.; Klavans, J.M.; Fawcett, P.J.; Anderson, R.S.; Jiménez-Moreno, Gonzalo; LeGrande, A.N.; Pausata, F.S.R.; Thompson, A.J.; Zhu, J.Editorial
Springer Nature
Fecha
2025Referencia bibliográfica
Published version: Todd, V.L.; Shanahan, T.M., DiNezio, P.N., Klavans, J.M., Fawcett, P.J., Anderson, R.S., Jiménez-Moreno, G., LeGrande, A.N., Pausata, F.S.R., Thompson, A.J., Zhu, J., 2025. North Pacific ocean–atmosphere responses to Holocene and future warming drive Southwest US drought. Nature Geoscience 18 (7), 646-652. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41561-025-01726-z
Resumen
The Southwest United States is experiencing severe and persistent
drought, although uncertainties regarding the causes limit our ability to
predict changes in water availability. The severity of the current drought
has been attributed to a combination of warming and natural changes
in atmospheric circulation, suggesting that current rainfall deficits may
improve as natural oscillations reverse sign. Here we use new leaf-wax
stable isotope reconstructions and simulations for the mid-Holocene
(6 thousand years ago) and demonstrate that moderate warming of the
Northern Hemisphere can produce drought over the Southwest United
States through an ocean–atmosphere response originating in the North
Pacific. The patterns of ocean warming and rainfall change resemble the
negative phase of the Pacific Decadal Oscillation, indicating that this mode
can be excited by external forcings. A similar response to warming is evident
in future projections, leading to sustained winter precipitation deficits
through the mid-twenty-first century. However, the magnitudes of past and
current precipitation deficits associated with this North Pacific response are
systematically underestimated in models, possibly due to a weak coupling
of ocean–atmosphere interactions. Projections may also underestimate the
magnitude of this precipitation response to changes in the North Pacific,
leading to greater drought risk in this already water-poor region.





