Island Climate Update 55 - April 2005

April

Monthly climate

ENSO & SST

Forecast validation

Three-month outlook

Feature article

Tropical Pacific rainfall

Data sources

In this issue

  • (no image provided)

    April

    An overview of the present climate in the tropical South Pacific Islands, with an outlook for the coming months, to assist in dissemination of climate information in the Pacific region.
    Number 55 – April 2005
    March's climate: Suppressed convection over much of the Southwest Pacific. South Pacific Convergence Zone was weaker and further south and west than average. Warmer in many islands, cooler in New Caledonia. Three named tropical cyclones.
    ENSO and sea surface temperatures (SST): El Niño/Southern Oscillation conditions should ease to neutral by May.
  • (no image provided)

    Feature article

    The evolution of the weak El Niño 2004-2005
    Tony Barnston, International Research Institute (IRI)
    El Niño and La Niña episodes differ from one another, not only in their relative strengths, but also their seasons of onset, maturity, and demise, as well as the locations of their maximum sea surface temperature (SST) anomaly within the tropical Pacific. The peak SST anomaly at the warmest location in the tropical Pacific during an El Niño may exceed 5°C, as was the case in the great 1997-98 episode, or be only near 2°C, as in the 1994-95 or the 2004-05 episodes.
  • (no image provided)

    Forecast validation

    Forecast validation
    Forecast period: January to March 2005
    Enhanced convection was expected over Eastern and Western Kiribati and Tuvalu, with average or above average rainfall in Tokelau, the Northern Cook Islands, and the Society Islands of Central French Polynesia. Areas of suppressed convection with below average rainfall were expected over the Marquesas Islands and also New Caledonia, with average or below average rainfall in Vanuatu, Fiji, Tonga, Niue, Southern Cook Islands, and Papua New Guinea.
  • (no image provided)

    ENSO & SST

    ENSO and Sea Surface Temperatures
    The tropical Pacific Ocean is in a borderline El Niño state, with the monthly Southern Oscillation Index (SOI) back to near zero after its strong negative excursion in February. Surface zonal winds have returned to near normal across the Equatorial Pacific, and outgoing longwave radiation (OLR) anomalies now show suppressed convection across most of the tropical Pacific south of the Equator.
  • (no image provided)

    Monthly climate

    Climate developments in March 2005
    The outgoing long-wave radiation (OLR) anomaly pattern was very different from that of February. A large region of suppressed convection prevailed in March, extending from the Solomon Islands east to the Marquesas Islands of Northern French Polynesia, including Tuvalu, Wallis and Futuna, Western Samoa, Tokelau, northern Tonga, and the Northern Cook Islands.
  • (no image provided)

    Three-month outlook

    Tropical rainfall outlook: April to June 2005
    Continuing incoherence between the atmospheric and oceanic conditions because of the decaying El Niño conditons in the equatorial Pacific, and April to June being transition months from the wet to the dry season, resulted in lack of normal rainfall patterns in the Pacific region.
    Enhanced convection is expected over Western Kiribati and the Northern Cook Islands, where the rainfall is forecast to be near or above average.
    Dry conditions are expected over the Marquesas Islands of French Polynesia, where the expected rainfall is below average
  • (no image provided)

    Tropical Pacific rainfall

    Tropical Cyclone Update
    There were three tropical cyclones in March. Tropical cyclone Percy, which affected Tokelau was, the seventh named cyclone for the season. This was followed by Rae (near the Southern Cook Islands) on 6 March, and then Ingrid, which formed in the Coral Sea south of Papua New Guinea and then tracked west over Queensland and the Gulf of Carpentaria.
  • (no image provided)

    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