Greenhouse Gas Forcing a Necessary Causation for Marine Heatwaves Over the Northeast Pacific Warming Pool

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Abstract

Over the last decade, the northeast Pacific (NP) experienced strong marine heatwaves (MHWs) that produced devastating marine ecological impacts and received major societal concerns. Here, we assess the link between the well-mixed greenhouse gas (GHG) forcing and the occurrence probabilities of the duration and intensity of the NP MHWs. To begin with, we apply attribution technique on the SST time series, and detect a region of systematically and externally-forced SST increase -- the long-term warming pool -- co-located with the past notably Blob-like SST anomalies. The anthropogenic signal has recently emerged from the natural variability of SST over the warming pool, which we attribute primarily to increased GHG concentrations, with anthropogenic aerosols playing a secondary role. With extreme event attribution technique, we further show that GHG forcing is a necessary, but not a sufficient, causation for the multi-year persistent MHW events in the current climate, such as that happened in 2019/2020 over the warming pool. However, the occurrence of the 2019/2020 MHW was extremely unlikely in the absence of GHG forcing. Thus, as GHG emissions continue to firmly rise, it is very likely that GHG forcings will become a sufficient cause for events of the magnitude of the 2019/2020 record event.

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europepmc
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License: CC-BY-4.0