Study: 'The Blob' was a product of weather patterns and El Niño

From the GEORGIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY

El Niño played a key role in Pacific marine heatwave, as did potentially climate change

This is a map showing the development of the marine heatwave. CREDIT Georgia Institute of Technology
This is a map showing the development of the marine heatwave. CREDIT Georgia Institute of Technology

The Northeast Pacific’s largest marine heatwave on record was at least in part caused by El Niño climate patterns. And unusually warm water events in that ocean could potentially become more frequent with rising levels of greenhouse gases.

That’s the findings of a new study by researchers from Georgia Institute of Technology and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. They linked the 2014-2015 marine heatwave – often referred to as the “warm blob” – to weather patterns that started in late 2013. The heatwave caused marine animals to stray far outside of their normal habitats, disrupting ecosystems and leading to massive die-offs of seabirds, whales and sea lions.

The study, which was published July 11 in journal Nature Climate Change, was sponsored by the National Science Foundation.

“We had two and a half years of consistent warming, which translated to a record harmful algal bloom in 2015 and prolonged stress on the ecosystem,” said Emanuele Di Lorenzo, a professor in Georgia Tech’s School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences. “What we do in the study is ask whether this type of activity is going to become more frequent with greenhouse gases rising.”

The researchers traced the origin of the marine heat wave to a few months during late 2013 and early 2014, when a ridge of high pressure led to much weaker winds that normally bring cold Artic [sic] air over the North Pacific. That allowed ocean temperatures to rise a few degrees above average.

Then, in mid-2014 the tropical weather pattern El Niño intensified the warming throughout the Pacific. The warm temperatures lingered through the end of the year, and by 2015 the region of warm water had expanded to the West Coast, where algal blooms closed fisheries for clams and Dungeness crab.

“The bottom line is that El Niño had a hand in this even though we’re talking about very long-distance influences,” said Nate Mantua, a research scientist at NOAA Fisheries’ Southwest Fisheries Science Center and a coauthor of the study.

The researchers used climate model simulations to show the connection between increasing greenhouse gas concentrations and the impact on the ocean water temperatures. The study found that these extreme weather events could become more frequent and pronounced as the climate warms.

“This multi-year event caused extensive impacts on marine life,” Di Lorenzo said. “For example, some salmon populations have life cycles of three years, so the marine heatwave has brought a poor feeding, growth and survival environment in the ocean for multiple generations. Events like this contribute to reducing species diversity.”

And the effects of the “warm blob” could linger.

“Some of these effects are still ongoing and not fully understood because of the prolonged character of the ocean heatwave,” Di Lorenzo said. “Whether these multi-year climate extremes will become more frequent under greenhouse forcing is a key question for scientists, resource managers and society.”

###

This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant Nos. OCE 1356924 and OCE 1419292. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.

CITATION: Emanuele Di Lorenzo and Nathan Mantua, “Multi-year persistence of the 2014/15 North Pacific marine heatwave,” (Nature Climate Change, July 2016).

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TG
July 13, 2016 1:56 am

This study need more study, it has a lot of – “could potential” Thank god for Co2 climate models that produce what they expected (more grant money)

george e. smith
Reply to  TG
July 13, 2016 7:33 am

“””””….. “What we do in the study is ask whether this type of activity is going to become more frequent with greenhouse gases rising.” …..”””””
So how do you propose to find out if a new blob will happen somewhere else and at some other time?? Oh, excuse me, I thought you were talking about climate; but from your statement I see you only want to find out whether ” studies ” will become more frequent.
I would say rather unlikely once people realize the scam you are running.
I can’t imagine a more complete disconnect between rising greenhouse gases and ocean water Temperatures in one small spot on the globe.
“Heat” (noun) goes from hot to cold (places), and hot (adjective) air goes up; not down.
Seems like the blob should be going up into the atmosphere, not coming down from space.
Wake me when you predict a blob off Miramar Beach at Half Moon Bay, so I can remember to take my swimsuit with me, when I go walk there.
G

Sauterne
Reply to  george e. smith
July 13, 2016 11:17 am

An interesting question comes to mind: at what speed must a warm mass of air stay below while flowing over a cool body of water such that the water temperature will rise rather than drop due to evaporative cooling? At that slow speed it’s the only way “CO2 warmed” air can warm a body of water it passes over.

george e. smith
Reply to  TG
July 13, 2016 7:38 am

The blob just ate my post. That seems to happen a lot. Not quite 97% of the time, but often enough for me to not even bother to send it.
G

george e. smith
Reply to  george e. smith
July 13, 2016 7:40 am

And I notice that the blob has an anti-blob right next to it. Do the CO2 dunnit models describe how the anti-blobs are caused ??
G

KLohrn
Reply to  george e. smith
July 13, 2016 6:13 pm

Please don’t question any anti-blobs, more tax money is required to answer that.

Editor
Reply to  TG
July 13, 2016 9:22 am

They have been working on climate assiduously for over 30 years, at a cost of billions of dollars, and at least a decade ago declared that the science was settled. So when did they predict the blob? They didn’t. When did they predict the latest El Nino? They predicted that it would come a year earlier and had to re-predict it for the following year. When did they predict the recent 18-year “pause”? They didn’t. When did they predict the record Antarctic sea ice? They didn’t. Etc, etc, etc. The science is settled? Total baloney. Never before have I witnessed such an absolute shower masquerading as scientists, and such an utterly corrupt bandwagon.

Sauterne
Reply to  Mike Jonas
July 13, 2016 11:09 am

Is a model still a model if it can only be used to understand the past? Shouldn’t a model, philosophically, have some predictive ability?

gary turner
July 13, 2016 2:02 am

I’d bet Dr Curry did not sign off on that hot PR blob.

Editor
July 13, 2016 2:20 am

Sea surface temperature anomalies are still elevated in the small region NOAA used for The Blob, but they’re back in the former pre-Blob range of variability. Here’s the graph through May 2016:comment image
I’m hoping KNMI will update through June the Reynolds OI.v2 data today.
Cheers.

Editor
Reply to  Bob Tisdale
July 13, 2016 4:55 am

I just posted the June 2016 SSTa update.
https://bobtisdale.wordpress.com/2016/07/13/june-2016-sea-surface-temperature-sst-anomaly-update/
Thanks, Geert Jan.
The sea surface temperature anomalies for The Blob made another uptick in June.
comment image

Pamela Gray
Reply to  Bob Tisdale
July 13, 2016 8:36 am

Bob, have you seen this new app from the UW climate department? It allows you to monitor buoy sensors located in the vicinity of the blob.
http://www.nanoos.org/documents/announcements/nanoos-climatology-announcement.pdf

njsnowfan
Reply to  Bob Tisdale
July 13, 2016 9:32 am

As expected Bob from Spotless weak/sun end of June.

Pavel Belolipetsky
Reply to  Bob Tisdale
July 14, 2016 2:50 am

Bob,
Do you know what explanations exist for the absence of warming trend in a blob region at the time then surrounding regions were warming?

Johann Wundersamer
July 13, 2016 2:56 am

“This multi-year event caused extensive impacts on marine life,” Di Lorenzo said. “For example, some salmon populations have life cycles of three years, so the marine heatwave has brought a poor feeding, growth and survival environment in the ocean for multiple generations. Events like this contribute to reducing species diversity.”
:Events like this contribute to species dispersion, the first step to more diversification.

Bernie
Reply to  Johann Wundersamer
July 13, 2016 6:10 am

More diversification is bad too… like grolar bears. Nothing good ever comes from the possibility of AGW.

July 13, 2016 3:13 am

But nobody knows if the ‘average temperature’ of the oceans stayed constant over that 4 years and merely distributed contained heat differently, or whether there was a higher than usual input of heat from some source such as the amount of received sunlight able to heat the oceans.
It does not seem fruitful to model hot spots as is done here, without knowing which of the 2 broad possibilities above applies. Mechanisms trump models.

Reply to  Geoff Sherrington
July 13, 2016 7:03 pm

A bounded random walk fits the bill pretty well I think.

Dr. S. Jeevananda Reddy
July 13, 2016 3:50 am

The statement “And unusually warm water events in that ocean could potentially become more frequent with rising levels of greenhouse gases.” is a highly hypothetical and not based on facts but part of fiction.
Dr. S. Jeevananda Reddy

Reply to  Dr. S. Jeevananda Reddy
July 13, 2016 8:25 am

“The researchers traced the origin of the marine heat wave to a few months during late 2013 and early 2014, when [the RRR (Ridiculously Resilient Ridge)] led to much weaker winds that normally bring cold Artic [sic] air over the North Pacific. That allowed ocean temperatures to rise a few degrees above average.”
In fact, this “unusually warm water events in that ocean” had nothing to do with greenhouse gases. It was just weather.

Reply to  Dr. S. Jeevananda Reddy
July 13, 2016 7:01 pm

I am not convinced that DLR, which is real, can cause much warming to warrant the CO2 alarmist concerns.

Johann Wundersamer
July 13, 2016 3:50 am

“leading to massive die-offs of seabirds, whales and sea lions.”
The ARTICLE PREVIEW says nothing about the impact on mortality rates of seabirds, whales and sea lions.

Ray Boorman
Reply to  Johann Wundersamer
July 13, 2016 5:29 pm

I am wondering what evidence they have to prove the claim about massive die-offs. Are they inferring it from models, or is there actual physical evidence such as bodies?

David A
July 13, 2016 3:59 am

There is no scientific basis for stating that CO2 had anything to do with the RRR. (Ridiculously Resilient Ridge) that was primary cause to both the “Blob” and the California drought. California has had many droughts, prior to humans driving SUVs; which were far greater deeper and longer then the recent drought. Similar weather patterns and jet stream patterns in the 1970s were attributed to the coming “ice age”. I have some compassion for many so called scientists, who worked and studied hard, and who’s careers depend on linking weather to CAGW.
The declining blob may strike back at warmists, as it worked in conjunction with the El Niño to elevate SS records to new recent highs. Likewise, if it continues to decline it may well bring down GMT more then the usual swing away from a strong El Nino. Indeed, the declining “Blob” may be responsible for the narrow breath (relative to the wider longer warmth shown in 1998) of the 2015/16 El Nino’s warmth as shown in RSS and UHA charts.

Johann Wundersamer
July 13, 2016 4:10 am

Examples of dramatic species range shifts in summer and fall 2014 that have come to our attention include the following: (1) a skipjack tuna caught near the mouth of the Copper River in July [Medred, 2014]; (2) ocean sunfish and a thresher shark caught in summertime surveys off the coast of SE Alaska, where distributions of juvenile salmon and pomfret were also much different than usual (W. Fournier, personal communication, 2014); (3) a record high northern diversion rate of Fraser River sockeye salmon, i.e., the proportion of adults returning around the north versus south side of Vancouver Island [Gallagher, 2014]; (4) rhinoceros auklets in British Columbia preying on Pacific saury (associated with subtropical waters) rather than sand lance (associated with subarctic waters) in summer (J. Zamon, personal communication, 2014), (5) high catches of albacore tuna near the coast of WA and OR during summer and fall 2014; (6) juvenile pompano collected during surveys near the mouth of the Columbia River in summer (L. Weitkamp, personal communication, 2014); and (7) widespread strandings of Velella from British Columbia to California in July and August. There was also a massive influx of dead or starving Cassin’s Auklets onto PNW beaches from October to December 2014 [Opar, 2015]. The list is much more illustrative than comprehensive but does suggest that the physical oceanographic conditions had substantial and widespread impacts on the ecosystem. The full ecosystem response remains to be determined, but it is liable to be profound, as occurred in the California Current during a period of weak coastal upwelling in 2005 (Warm Ocean Conditions in the California Current in Spring/Summer 2005: Causes and Consequences, GRL special issue, 2006).
________________________________________
Fournier, personal communication, 2014); (3) a record high northern
diversion rate
of Fraser River sockeye salmon.

Coach Springer
July 13, 2016 4:11 am

A pile of speculation in response to a leading question with an embedded assumption. Funded by the National Science Foundation, so “science.”

Johann Wundersamer
July 13, 2016 4:24 am

“a record high northern
diversion rate
reducing species diversity.”
:
sure. How could we make it without peer review.

Peter Morgenroth
July 13, 2016 4:27 am

Perspective on the Blob: Studies of fish scales and otoliths from cores taken in the Santa Barbara (California) basin show a pattern of repeating (putataive) warm water incursions over the past 1500 years. The were (are) known as Davidson periods and corresponded with the rise and fall of sardine populations along the California coast. Local fish moved as far north as Oregon and Washington and aquatic fauna from from the latitude of Cape San Lucas (Cabo San Lucas, Mexido) were found north of San Francisco. Afterwards the sardine populations failed and were replaced by engaulids (anchovy) for long periods of time. A recent example is the failure of the California sardine fishery in the 1940s. The explanation offered was a change in the position of the Alaska low pressure area which allowed the jet stream to move northward, the prevailing NW winds along the Pacific West Coast failed and water moved offshore dragging warm water up from Mexico into the “vacuum”. That was then (1950s). Now we have el nino and climate change. The warm water blob is not a new phenomenon – better measured now, better presented graphically, but not new and its predecessors over 1500 years were not caused by ACC.

Johann Wundersamer
Reply to  Peter Morgenroth
July 13, 2016 1:09 pm

Peter, no need for “vacuum”. Us layman can go with “low pressure” aka hypotension.

Johann Wundersamer
July 13, 2016 4:47 am

science community may develop a ‘peer wiki’ analog german Guttenplag wiki.

Lawrence Ayres
July 13, 2016 5:32 am

Could potentially??????????? I guess that ‘s to ensure they do not upset the grant givers.

H.R.
Reply to  Lawrence Ayres
July 13, 2016 6:01 am

I can improve on that, Lawrence; perhaps could possibly have the potential to… ;o)

Johann Wundersamer
Reply to  H.R.
July 13, 2016 7:38 am

beat me to: Maybe science community can. Sure denialists won’t loose an echo chamber / won’t do it.

Johann Wundersamer
Reply to  H.R.
July 13, 2016 8:05 am

Yes, my dinglish:
won’t loose -> don’t want to loose.
not a typo, plain outlandish.

GP Hanner
July 13, 2016 6:30 am

And here it is, just three weeks short of midsummer and the Western Pacific has not yet seen a typhoon, nor has the Indian Ocean. However, the Eastern Pacific has seen a conveyor belt of tropical cyclones developing off Mexico and wandering out toward the Hawaiian Archipelago. Tells you where the heat is.
In the Atlantic, not much prospect for hurricanes yet this season. Not enough heat to support that kind of weather..

Steve Fraser
Reply to  GP Hanner
July 13, 2016 7:15 am

Here is a nice little pic of what may be the lineup for the 18th. They seem to gain intensity to the middle of the track, and then dissipate out by Hawaii.
https://earth.nullschool.net/#2016/07/18/0600Z/wind/surface/level/overlay=total_precipitable_water/orthographic=-121.81,2.10,1185/loc=-131.182,19.882

Steve Fraser
Reply to  larrypenang
July 13, 2016 12:17 pm

There was a typhoon in Taiwan several days ago.

GPHanner
Reply to  larrypenang
July 14, 2016 9:29 am

Steve Fraser: Joint Typhoon Warning Center(http://www.usno.navy.mil/JTWC/) hasn’t reported even a TD in many, many weeks.

Steve Fraser
July 13, 2016 6:38 am

Hmmm. Very interesting how the species adapted to the changes in the environment so rapidly. I’ll be waiting on pins and needles for the follow-ups of how the humans adapt…

Reply to  Steve Fraser
July 13, 2016 7:03 am

Homo sapien subspecies Liberal dumbassitus adapts by demanding more of OPM. But I feel an oncoming cold wind, which perhaps may possibly could send them scurrying back into their holes.

Steve Fraser
Reply to  Joel O’Bryan
July 13, 2016 7:11 am

+1

Pamela Gray
Reply to  Joel O’Bryan
July 13, 2016 8:19 am

Coffee in nose and on computer screen. Too funny! Liberal dumbassitus. Brilliant!

Reply to  Joel O’Bryan
July 13, 2016 9:54 am

I am so glad that I swallowed by soup and put down the bowl before I read your post! Clam chowder on keyboard is not good for my demeanor.
Great term!
But shouldn’t it have more Latin? Homo sapien concutio dumbassitus liberati
Concutio; Latin for alarm, disturb, terrorize…
liberati; slang for, “Reserved intellectual who reads but mostly writes breakthrough thoughts. Sits in cafes with notebooks sprawled everywhere. Likes blazers and grandpa’s closet.
“I think that Liberati only wears glasses so he can take them off and rub his forehead like a tormented intellectual.”

Walter Sobchak
July 13, 2016 7:36 am

“The researchers used climate model simulations” Stop right there. The “researchers” might just have well have used play dough and magic markers.

Pamela Gray
Reply to  Walter Sobchak
July 13, 2016 8:18 am

LOL!

July 13, 2016 8:18 am

“The researchers traced the origin of the marine heat wave to a few months during late 2013 and early 2014, when a ridge of high pressure led to much weaker winds that normally bring cold Artic [sic] air over the North Pacific. That allowed ocean temperatures to rise a few degrees above average.”
So in other words, it was weather. The only link to CO2 was via models, not reality.

njsnowfan
July 13, 2016 8:29 am

I feel the Blob is mostly Solar cycle forced. The blob and prolonged spike in the +PDO I feel is mostly caused by the weakest solar cycle #24 in over 200 years.
Weakest solar cycle in 200 years I feel has been causing a LIA like pattern in Great Lakes and NE. During 13-14 and 14-15 winters two back to back years of record ice on the great lakes occured.
If you look at all the big great lakes ice years going back 50 years, Big great lakes ice years have not occured near a solar cycle peaks and only near the bottoms of thrsolar cycles when the PDO spikes.
Same pattern was in place during the 15-16 winter but the strong ElNino basically overwhelmed it with waves of moist air .
I have been studying solar cycle #24 with Global SST’s , Global surface temps and Arctic temps for many years now and it is an amazing cycle to watch unfold.
I started seeing 3-5 day lags in global temps rises or dips with increases solar or decreased solar activities when weather static is low.
One would think when solar activities rise air temps or SST should rise but it is the other way around. Solar rises = Temps fall and Solar falls = Temps Rise.
I wish someone like Bob T could do some charting on daily solar and global temps with regions and chart solar cycles with Great lakes ice years.
An older great chart that Joe D at Wxbell made a while ago.
I use it all the time in tweets.
https://mobile.twitter.com/NJSnowFan/status/752876097172344832

Pamela Gray
Reply to  njsnowfan
July 13, 2016 8:48 am

As a “feeling” amateur scientist, you are obligated to rule out the first encountered pathology before jumping to speculation. The blob may be the result of weakened winds augmented by circulating left over El Nino water. These intrinsic processes have internal variability thus may not care what the Sun is doing.

njsnowfan
Reply to  Pamela Gray
July 13, 2016 9:02 am

The Sun puts the wheels in motion then feedbacks occur. My theory is, stronger solar = more winds/mixing of SST= colder and weaker solar = less winds/mixing = warmer
There are also what I call sweet spots where the wheels can spin fast or slower

Pamela Gray
Reply to  Pamela Gray
July 13, 2016 9:12 am

Stronger solar equals colder? Now that’s a new one. My advice? Que the solar enthusiasts and dodge quick!

njsnowfan
Reply to  Pamela Gray
July 13, 2016 9:27 am

Yes my theory, stronger solar activities in short term = colder SST’s from more surface mixing but that mixing warms deeper water

Johann Wundersamer
Reply to  njsnowfan
July 13, 2016 1:35 pm
July 13, 2016 9:54 am

Before these researchers used these computer models, did they check the simulator test results first?
A bit like your anaesthetist not checking they have full bottles of oxygen and halothane (what ever) prior to a long medical procedure.
If these researchers did not check the simulator signoffs before use then all of their work, time and effort was wasted.

Svend Ferdinandsen
July 13, 2016 11:20 am

It follows the usual pattern: Warm is climate change, cold is weather.
From DMI: http://www.dmi.dk/nyheder/arkiv/nyheder-2016/juli/nordatlantens-blaa-plet-bare-vejr/
The cold spot in the North Atlantic is just weather.
Nothing to see here move on to the hot spots.

Michael Carter
July 13, 2016 11:48 am

To me the key question is: why is the blob location geographically static?
We know that the indicative anomalies during an ENSO cycle migrate rapidly – yet the blob stays static
Back to the drawing board guys

Johann Wundersamer
Reply to  Michael Carter
July 13, 2016 1:53 pm

Michael Carter on July 13, 2016 at 11:48 am
To me the key question is: why is the blob location geographically static?
– because the western mexican shore is geographically static and that b**ch of a sun predictably moves back over head dayly east/west?

July 13, 2016 9:13 pm

There is always an explanation for anomalies in science. The trick is in figuring out how CO2 caused it. If there is no smoking gun, creative speculation has to suffice.
One could also speculate with alternative natural explanations/theories……….but .the science was settled over a decade ago. So we know to start with the assumption that increasing CO2 was somehow responsible..

Haverwilde
July 13, 2016 10:59 pm

Thank God for the Blob. It made for a couple of nice summers and winters here in Southeast Alaska. Of course the salmon run was poor, hmm wonder if they’re related.
The CO2 levels in the water has caused a bit of havoc with the local shellfish hatchery. (A little soda ash in the water helps that problem. But they lost a couple of batches before they got that figured out.)
On balance, I would opt to keep the Blob going. Would it help if I kept the bonfires going all year?
Thank you WUWT, I enjoy this site.

July 14, 2016 1:31 am

I wonder if there was a blob off the coast of Brazil in 1875\76\77
Something drove their biggest drought on record. that was a very warm year, of course all the records start 1880.. conveniently

Øystein Nordfjeld
Reply to  Mark - Helsinki
July 14, 2016 9:26 am

The drought was caused by the strong El Nino between 1877-1878. More here : http://www.docentes.unal.edu.co/gpoveda/docs/Aceituno_et_al.pdf

July 14, 2016 1:32 am

Maybe El Nino and a blob also caused the US and CA massive droughts in the 1930s too

July 14, 2016 9:15 am

What was going on in the late 50s and early 60s?

ulriclyons
July 14, 2016 2:42 pm

Unusually warm water events in that ocean are more frequent in solar minima. There is a great analogue of the same kind of blocking setup from late 1875 to late 1878.