Southern twisters: Don't blame La Niña
By R. Monastersky
Storms in the southern United States turned vicious this month, spawning 150
tornadoes and killing 18 people during a time of year when funnel clouds normally
are a rare sight. Meteorologists are still struggling to explain what caused the
unprecedented number of January twisters, but they can rule out any direct link
with the climatic hellcat known as La Niña, a cooling of Pacific waters.
Last year, press reports tied extreme weatheroften erroneouslyto
El Niño, a warming of the equatorial Pacific that ended midway through
1998. With the Pacific now colder than normal, the question arises whether La
Niña should shoulder any blame for the severe storms in January, such as
the southern tornadoes and the 18.6-inch snowfall in Chicago. Last week, a press
release issued by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
trumpeted: "La Niña drives some U.S. winter weather extremes."
NOAA meteorologists, however, disavow any concrete connection between the
Pacific conditions and the storms. Joseph T. Schaefer, director of the National
Weather Service's Storm Prediction Center in Norman, Okla., examined U.S.
tornado records going back a half century, looking for evidence that January
tornadoes come more frequently during episodes of La Niña. "From my
49 years of data, I find nothing," he says.
Take Arkansas, for example. Dozens of tornadoes raked the state last week,
killing seven people. To test for a connection with La Niña, Schaefer
searched through the database for the months with the most Arkansas tornadoes.
Nine of the top 11 occurred in normal years, when neither La Niña nor
El Niño held sway in the Pacific. One of the remaining two months was
in a La Niña year, the other in an El Niño year.
Tennessee, also hit by tornadoes this year, showed a similar
patternindicating that the equatorial Pacific had no clear influence on
tornado frequency.
Ed O'Lenic, who makes forecasts for NOAA's Climate Prediction Center in Camp
Springs, Md., says that it is impossible to connect La Niña to any one
storm, such as the Jan. 2 blizzard in Chicago. He notes, however, that NOAA's
long-term forecasts were for a general increase in precipitation around the
Great Lakes and in the Northwest in early winter.
Forecasters agree that La Niña makes U.S. weather much more variable.
The colder-than-normal conditions in the equatorial Pacific weaken the jet
stream that sometimes flows over the southern states and helps keep weather
constant. Without the strong southern jet, the path of Pacific winds can jump
erratically as they pass over North America. Researchers are trying to determine
whether that increases the odds of blizzards.
Climate models suggest that La Niña will endure at least until June.
While meteorologists can't say whether to expect more record tornado outbreaks
or snowfalls, they foresee continuing changeable weather. "I think it's
good for people to be aware there is a lot of variability and that the potential
for severe weather still exists," says O'Lenic.