Aerosols implicated as a prime driver of twentieth-century North Atlantic
climate variability

Ben B. B. Booth, Nick J. Dunstone, Paul R. Halloran, Timothy Andrews &
Nicolas Bellouin

Affiliations

Nature (2012) doi:10.1038/nature10946 Received 16 September 2011

Published online 04 April 2012

2011

Systematic climate shifts have been linked to multidecadal variability in
observed sea surface temperatures in the North Atlantic Ocean 1 . These
links are extensive, influencing a range of climate processes such as
hurricane activity 2 and African Sahel 3, 4, 5 and Amazonian 5 droughts.
The variability is distinct from historical global-mean temperature changes
and is commonly attributed to natural ocean oscillations 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 . A
number of studies have provided evidence that aerosols can influence
long-term changes in sea surface temperatures 11, 12 , but climate models
have so far failed to reproduce these interactions 6, 9 and the role of
aerosols in decadal variability remains unclear. Here we use a
state-of-the-art Earth system climate model to show that aerosol emissions
and periods of volcanic activity explain 76 per cent of the simulated
multidecadal variance in detrended 1860–2005 North Atlantic sea surface
temperatures. After 1950, simulated variability is within observational
estimates; our estimates for 1910–1940 capture twice the warming of
previous generation models but do not explain the entire observed trend.
Other processes, such as ocean circulation, may also have contributed to
variability in the early twentieth century. Mechanistically, we find that
inclusion of aerosol–cloud microphysical effects, which were included in
few previous multimodel ensembles, dominates the magnitude (80 per cent)
and the spatial pattern of the total surface aerosol forcing in the North
Atlantic. Our findings suggest that anthropogenic aerosol emissions
influenced a range of societally important historical climate events such
as peaks in hurricane activity and Sahel drought. Decadal-scale model
predictions of regional Atlantic climate will probably be improved by
incorporating aerosol–cloud microphysical interactions and estimates of
future concentrations of aerosols, emissions of which are directly
addressable by policy actions.

ARTICLE

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