Island Climate Update 43 - April 2004

April

Monthly climate

ENSO & SST

Forecast validation

Three-month outlook

Feature article

Data sources

In this issue

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    Feature article

    Ocean signals after the 1997–98 El Niño
    Dr Melissa Bowen and Dr Phil Sutton, NIWA
    A series of warm events occurred in the Southwestern Pacific after the unusually strong 1997-98 El Niño. In 1998, record sea surface temperatures were measured around New Zealand, coral bleaching took place on the Great Barrier Reef, and a warming trend in the Tasman Sea increased. At the beginning of 1998, a region of elevated sea surface temperature formed, stretching southwest from the Queensland coast past New Zealand (Fig. 1). These elevated temperatures persisted for most of 1998.
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    Forecast validation

    Forecast validation
    Forecast period: January to March 2004
    Enhanced convection with above average or average rainfall was expected in parts of the tropical Southwest Pacific from the Solomon Islands extending east to the Austral Islands, including Samoa, the Northern Cook Islands and the Society and Austral Islands. Below average rainfall was predicted for the Marquesas Islands.
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    ENSO & SST

    ENSO and Sea Surface Temperatures
    SOI near zero
    Equatorial SST anomalies are near zero
    The equatorial Pacific is in a neutral state. Equatorial SST anomalies are near zero, but continue slightly positive in the far west.
    The monthly and seasonal SOI values are near zero. The NINO3 SST anomaly for March was about +0.2°C and NINO4 about +0.3°C (January to March are +0.3°C and +0.6°C, respectively). A Madden-Julian Oscillation (MJO) event induced westerly wind anomalies in the western Pacific from mid-March but the trade winds are otherwise near normal.
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    Monthly climate

    Climate developments in March 2004
    In March a large region of enhanced convergence persisted over the Caroline Islands, Papua New Guinea, northern Australia, and the Solomon Islands, extending into the Coral Sea (with rainfall exceeding 400 mm at many locations).
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    Three-month outlook

    Rainfall outlook for April to June 2004
    Above average rainfall over the Solomon Islands
    Suppressed convection in the equatorial eastern Pacific – Eastern Kiribati, the Marquesas Islands and parts of central French Polynesia
    Enhanced convection is expected with above average rainfall over the Solomon Islands and average or above average rainfall in Papua New Guinea and Western Kiribati. Another smaller region of enhanced convection is expected near the Date Line resulting in average or above average rainfall in Tonga and Niue.
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    Data sources

    Sources of South Pacific rainfall data
    This bulletin is a multi-national project with important collaboration from the following Pacific nations:
    American Samoa
    Australia
    Cook Islands
    Fiji
    French Polynesia
    Kiribati
    New Caledonia
    New Zealand
    Niue
    Papua New Guinea
    Pitcairn Island
    Samoa
    Solomon Islands
    Tokelau
    Tonga
    Tuvalu
    Vanuatu
    Requests for Pacific island climate data should be directed to the Meteorological Services concerned.
    Acknowledgements
    This bulletin is made possible with financial support from the New Zealand Agency for International Development (NZAID), Wellington, New Zealand, wi