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Brief Intoduction

El Niño

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El Niño

   The key reason that the delta still receives water is that flows of desert rivers are inherantly variable, and when there is excess, not all can be captured. In the case of the Colorado River, the El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) events appear to be the main source of excess water. The El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) event begins when a low-frequency, oceanic Rossby wave (resulting from the rotation of the Earth) sets off from the western boundary of the Pacific. The reflected wave pushes down the thermocline that exists in the west-central Pacific; this produces warm sea surface temperatures (SST) and thereby reduces the efficiency of upwelling to cool the surface. Winds blow towards the warmer water (in the west) and really start the "bathtub sloshing" prior to the El Niño event.

   In normal (non-El Niño) years, the trade winds blow towards the west across the tropical Pacific and are responsible for increased warm surface water in the west Pacific; SST is 8 C warmer in the west Pacific Ocean, with cooler temperatures of the west coast of South America due to upwelling from the deep, cold, nutrient-rich water with diverse lifeforms. At 110 W longitude, a thermocline of cool water (17 C) is about 50 m from the surface.

   The onset and termination of El Niño result from interactions of the coupled ocean-atmosphere system, specifically, the unstable air-sea interaction and planetary scale oceanic waves. In El Niño years, the trade winds weaken over the central Pacific Ocean and the piled-up water in the west sloshes back east, carrying the warm water with it. Also moving east, heat and moisture rises into the atmosphere, distorting the jet stream path and shifting weather patterns globally. This leads to a depression in the thermocline in the East Pacific, a depression in elevation in the west Pacific, and a general warming of the surface layers in the east and central equatorial waters. At 110 W longitude, the thermocline of cool water (17 C) is 150 m from the surface. When the further the cool water is from the surface, then unusually warm water can appear near the surface; this phenomenon is where El Niño gets its "warm event" association. The depth of the thermocline reduces the efficiency of the upwelling and decreases the supply of nutrient rich cold water to the surface. There is a corresponding decrease in primary productivity and effect on higher trophic levels. When eastern SST becomes warm, the east-to west temperature contrast is small, so the trade winds weaken even further, leading to a complete collapse with essentially flat conditions across the entire equatorial Pacific.

   La Niña the "cold event" is characterized by strengthening of the trade winds and cold SST in the equatorial Pacific levels. These events occur irregularly at intervals of 2-7 years, although the average is about 3-4 years and they typically last 12-18 months. La Niña follows El Niño most of the time, but El Niño is more frequent, stronger. The most severe effects are found close to the equator. The El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) is the breakdown of the surface transport or trade winds that drive warm surface water to the western Pacific and subsequently cause cold, bottom waters to rise/upwell along the coast of Peru.

   In 1990, the metropolitan water district of southern California took twice (over 1-maf./yr.) their water allowance from the river because Arizona was not using its share (Carrier, 1991). In fact, from 1980 until now, Arizona has had considerably more wet years than in the past due to ENSO. The 1980's and 1990's featured a very active ENSO cycle, with five El Nino episodes (1982-83, 1986-87, 1991-1993, 1994-95, and 1997-98) and three La El Nina episodes (1984/85, 1988/89, 1995-96) occurring during the period. This period also featured two of the strongest El Nino episodes of the century (1982-83 and 1997-98), as well as two consecutive periods of El Nino conditions during 1991-1995 without an intervening cold episode.

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