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Future changes in marine heatwaves based on high-resolution ensemble projections for the northwestern Pacific Ocean
February 28,2024

Yuma Kawakami, Hideyuki Nakano, L. Shogo Urakawa, Takahiro Toyoda, Kei Sakamoto, Shiro Nishikawa, Toru Sugiyama, Masao Kurogi, Yoichi Ishikawa, Katsunari Sato & Goro Yamanaka

Published in Journal of Oceanography, Jan. 2024

Marine heatwaves (MHWs) are oceanic conditions characterized by extremely high sea surface temperature (SST) anomalies that last for several days to years. Because MHWs have devastating effects on marine ecosystems and significant impacts on fisheries, understanding future MHWs is important for adapting to upcoming climate changes. In this study, we examined future changes in MHWs in the northwestern Pacific Ocean (18–53ºN, 117ºE–170ºW) under two CO2 emission scenarios using a high-resolution ensemble (four members for each scenario) simulation product using a high-resolution ocean model that satisfactorily resolves the Kuroshio, Kuroshio Extension, and SST fronts. Following global warming, MHWs based on a threshold in the historical period (1981–2005) will increase and intensify (i.e., occur with higher SST anomalies than before). In the historical period, the annual MHW days ranged from 20 to 34 days. Annual MHW days increase to 63–313 days (188 days–all year round) depending on the region under the high CO2 mitigation (emission) scenario at the end of the twenty-first century of 2076–2100. Furthermore, we investigated the spatial details of future MHWs. Future MHWs reflect the magnitude of SST variability in addition to that of sea surface warming in the twenty-first century; future MHWs are less frequent and more intense in the subtropical–subarctic frontal zone with large SST variability than in other regions.

Kawakami, Y., Nakano, H., Urakawa, L.S. et al. Future changes in marine heatwaves based on high-resolution ensemble projections for the northwestern Pacific Ocean. J Oceanogr (2024). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10872-024-00714-y

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