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century. That shift determines
where the maximum precipi-
tation falls, where it rains on
land, and how cyclones get
steered over water. If you’re a
farmer in Africa or a fi sherman
in the Atlantic, or sailing in
those areas, that’s going to be a
very big deal.
PV: Some of the changes in
the climate models seem
counterintuitive, such as
diminished wind speeds
in tropical and sub tropical
zones and an increase in
trade winds. What causes
that?
Rasch: When we talk about
climate, as opposed to weather,
we have to think about how
the wind fi elds and ocean cur-
rents distribute heat around
the planet. More energy tends
to get soaked up in the equa-
torial regions, and that heat
gets redistributed to the rest of
the planet by wind and ocean
currents. The polar regions
radiate some of that heat back
into space. Winds carry equa-
torial heat to the poles, along
with greenhouse gases, in great
circulation patterns that have
been controlling our global cli-
mate for centuries.
We’ve detected a spin-
ning down of those circula-
tion patterns, a diminishing of
winds associated with those
patterns, in the tropics. Some
circulations go north and
south while others go east and
west. These circulation pat-
terns, and percolation systems
in the ocean, deep under-
water, move heat around the
planet. Right now, all of those
patterns of heat distribution
are in a state of fl ux.
PV: What do climate models
tell us about the infl uence of
El Niño and La Niña events
in coming years?
Rasch: The models predict
that these patterns are going
to intensify. There’s also a
suggestion that the El Niño
southern oscillation pat-
terns are shifting eastward.
Rising ocean temperatures
will change El Niño’s inten-
sity and position, and this
will have far-reaching con-
sequences, a kind of cascade
of eff ects. The coastlines of
Peru and Chile, for example,
enjoy an upwelling of nutri-
ents from deep in the ocean
that brings food to their fi sh-
eries. Small changes in those
currents and ocean temps can
have big impacts downstream.
Fisheries scientists in the
Southern Hemisphere are very
worried about this because it
has the potential to aff ect huge
population centers in South
America and Africa.
PV: You’ve said that sailors
tend to think of weather
patterns over water, when in
fact many of those patterns
are set in motion by phe-
nomena on land. Could you
tell us a bit more about that,
and how climate change will
infl uence those patterns?
Rasch: A good example of this
begins in Africa. There’s been
a shift in rainfall patterns over
Africa that’s associated with
GREEN WAKES
This map from August 2015 shows sea-surface temperature
anomalies. The dark red is 5 degrees C above average.
COURTESY OF NOAA