Validation of boreal summer tropical鈥揺xtratropical causal links in seasonal forecasts
Weather and Climate Dynamics Copernicus Publications 4:3 (2023) 701-723
Authors:
Giorgia Di Capua, Dim Coumou, Bart van den Jurk, Antje Weisheimer, Andrew Turner, Reik Donner
Abstract:
Much of the forecast skill in the mid-latitudes on seasonal timescales originates from deep convection in the tropical belt. For boreal summer, such tropical鈥揺xtratropical teleconnections are less well understood compared to winter. Here we validate the representation of boreal summer tropical鈥揺xtratropical teleconnections in a general circulation model in comparison with observational data. To characterise variability between tropical convective activity and mid-latitude circulation, we identify the South Asian monsoon (SAM)鈥揷ircumglobal teleconnection (CGT) pattern and the western North Pacific summer monsoon (WNPSM)鈥揘orth Pacific high (NPH) pairs as the leading modes of tropical鈥揺xtratropical coupled variability in both reanalysis (ERA5) and seasonal forecast (SEAS5) data. We calculate causal maps based on the Peter and Clark momentary conditional independence (PCMCI) causal discovery algorithm, which identifies causal links in a 2D field, to show the causal effect of each of these patterns on circulation and convection in the Northern Hemisphere. The spatial patterns and signs of the causal links in SEAS5 closely resemble those seen in ERA5, independent of the initialisation date of SEAS5. By performing a subsampling experiment (over time), we analyse the strengths of causal links in SEAS5 and show that they are qualitatively weaker than those in ERA5. We identify those regions for which SEAS5 data well reproduce ERA5 values, e.g. the southeastern USA, and highlight those where the bias is more prominent, e.g. North Africa and in general tropical regions. We demonstrate that different El Ni帽o鈥揝outhern Oscillation phases have only a marginal effect on the strength of these links. Finally, we discuss the potential role of model mean-state biases in explaining differences between SEAS5 and ERA5 causal links.