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A controversial insight into Southwest Pacific mid-Holocene seasonality: from corals to models
Claire E. Lazareth, M.G. Bustamante Rosell, N. Duprey, N. Pujol, G. Cabioch, S. Caquineau, T. Corrège, F. Le Cornec, C. Maes, M. Mandeng-Yogo and B. Turcq
PAGES news
21(2)
66-67
2013
Claire E. Lazareth1, M.G. Bustamante Rosell1, N. Duprey1, N. Pujol2, G. Cabioch1,§, S. Caquineau1, T. Corrège2, F. Le Cornec1, C. Maes3, M. Mandeng-Yogo1 and B. Turcq1
“Seasonal amplitude was higher in the Southwest Pacific during the mid-Holocene,” say the corals. “It was not,” reply the models. “More work is needed,” agree the researchers…
In the Southwest (SW) Pacific, the seasonal changes in seawater surface characteristics, such as temperature (SST) and salinity (SSS), are governed mainly by the position and intensity of the South Pacific Convergence Zone (SPCZ) and by the occurrences of El Niño and La Niña events. The SPCZ is a southeast narrow cloudy belt that influences the wind and rain conditions from Papua New Guinea to French Polynesia (Trenberth 1976). During the austral summer, the SPCZ moves southwest whereas during the austral winter it moves north. Consequently, waters in the SW Pacific are generally warmer and less saline during the austral summer, and colder and saltier in winter. At the interannual time scale, the main changes in SST and SSS in the SW Pacific relate to El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) dynamics, with a periodicity of ca. 2-7 years (Trenberth 1976). During an El Niño event, warm waters of the equatorial West Pacific (the Warm Pool) and connected precipitation migrate toward the central and eastern Pacific. Consequently, the SW Pacific SST decreases slightly while precipitation decreases strongly, leading to higher SSS (e.g. Delcroix 1998). The opposite occurs during La Niña events. Therefore, knowledge of past water characteristics at a seasonal resolution has the potential to provide information on the position and intensity of the SPCZ as well as on the occurrence of ENSO events. Mid-Holocene (6 ka BP) hydrographic proxy data from the SW Pacific are rare. However, this is a key period, characterized by a change in ENSO amplitude that is unfortunately not yet entirely understood.
Corals and numerical models: tools to look back in time
Past seasonal data on SST and SSS can be obtained from archives such as massive coral skeletons. The aragonitic skeleton of coral is secreted by polyps over several decades or centuries, at a rate of around 1 cm year-1 for massive forms. The chemical composition of skeletal aragonite reflects the properties of the water in which the coral has lived. In tropical areas, studies focus on the massive Porites sp. corals. The Strontium/Calcium (Sr/Ca) ratio (Corrège 2006) is a robust proxy for SST in these corals. The stable oxygen isotopic ratio (δ18O) is used, combined with Sr/Ca, to reconstruct the isotopic composition of surface seawater (δ18Osw), which is in turn closely related to SSS (via the evaporation vs. precipitation budget).
Climate models, based on current knowledge of the various compartments of the Earth system, help understand modern climate variability and predict future changes. Climate models with external forcings different to current ones (e.g. different orbital forcings, ice sheets, greenhouse gas concentrations) can be used to simulate past climatic changes. Many model simulations exist for the mid-Holocene (e.g. 19 in the Paleoclimate Modelling Intercomparison Project [PMIP2] database; http://pmip2.lsce.ipsl.fr/; Braconnot et al. 2007). Their main forcing is a millennial-scale change in the seasonality of insolation. For the SW Pacific region, the insolation for January to March was lower than at present while it was higher for August to October.
To gain an insight into SW Pacific mid-Holocene mean climate at seasonal resolution and hence into ENSO characteristics, we studied corals from New Caledonia and Vanuatu which have been dated to 5.5 ka BP and 6.7-6.5 ka BP respectively. A ~1 cm-thick slab, cut along the axis of maximum growth of the coral colonies, was X-rayed to reveal the annual growth bands. To ensure the skeleton was well preserved, pieces were collected and analyzed for their mineralogy using X-ray diffraction, and for their microstructure using scanning electronic microscopy. If the skeleton preservation was found to be satisfactory, the slab was continuously sampled at 1-mm steps, providing on average one sample per month of coral growth. The samples were then dissolved and analyzed to determine their chemical composition. The New Caledonia coral was too short (~20 years) to investigate ENSO dynamics and as the δ18O proved to be partly altered, only the SST reconstructed with Sr/Ca will be discussed here.
The 6 ka BP PMIP2 model simulations show a cooling of the tropical Pacific SST (Zheng et al. 2008) and a decrease in seasonal SST amplitude (south of 10°S and between 160-260°E for the South Pacific) related to the insolation change. The results obtained on the New Caledonia coral were compared with the six simulations for which monthly data were available and which correctly reproduced the current SST cycle in the New Caledonia region on four 2° by 2° grid points (164-168°E, 20-24°S).
The SPCZ at 6 ka BP: Where was it located?
In the New Caledonia lagoon, the mid-Holocene SST seasonal amplitude as seen by the corals was higher than nowadays (Fig. 1a). This difference is mainly due to colder mid-Holocene winters. In the New Caledonia region, the histogram of both the modern and mid-Holocene coral-reconstructed SST monthly values (Fig. 1c), and the 0 ka BP model outputs (Fig. 1d) show two modes, corresponding to the positions of the SPCZ in winter (July-August-September, JAS) and in summer (December-January-February, DJF). In the 6 ka BP coral results however, colder temperatures prevail in the winter mode, with a wider distribution. We interpret this as reflecting a more variable position and/or a weakening of the SPCZ during mid-Holocene winters. None of the PMIP2 models for the New Caledonia region reproduce an increase in seasonal SST amplitude in the mid-Holocene and the bi-modality is maintained (Fig. 1d). The models generally follow the insolation change: a warmer winter and a colder summer, leading to reduced seasonality (Fig. 1b).
For the Vanuatu corals, Sr/Ca and δ18O were measured as proxies for SST and SSS, respectively, and data from the longest colony were used to highlight ENSO characteristics during the early mid-Holocene. The precipitation regime in Vanuatu at 6.7-6.5 ka BP was different from the current one. Fossil corals indicate peaking SSS in summer (DJF) whereas low SSS would have been expected from the reduced summer insolation at that time. Indeed, summer today is accompanied by strong precipitation brought by the southward displacement of the SPCZ. The reconstructed high mid-Holocene SSS suggests that in the SW Pacific at 6.7-6.5 ka BP the SPCZ was located further north than nowadays (Duprey et al. 2012). At that time, ENSO variability was reduced by 20-30% compared to the modern ENSO. It remains uncertain, however, whether the reduced ENSO variability reflects a real trend in ENSO dynamics or if it resulted from a weaker coupling between the precipitation regime and the SPCZ.
Are proxy data and models compatible for 6 ka BP?
While coral records suggest a reduced SPCZ influence in the SW Pacific, possibly from 6.7-6.5 to 5.5 ka BP, the PMIP2 model maps of precipitation reveal only a small shift of the SPCZ towards the northeast and a decrease in associated precipitation during the winter months (Fig. 2b). These small changes, although in the right direction, are, however, not sufficient to simulate an increase in the SST seasonality in the SW Pacific region at 6 ka BP.
The modeled insolation-driven hemispheric change in seasonality is not reflected in the SW Pacific proxy data. This suggests the models have difficulty in reproducing mid-Holocene changes in coupled ocean-atmosphere circulation in this region. This could be due to known model biases in representing the current, and thus also the 6 ka BP, SPCZ, and to the models’ large grid size to which the SPCZ seasonal displacement is sensitive. On the other hand, corals are shallow water organisms and the SST and SSS they record may not be valid for open oceans. Clearly, more data and new model runs are needed to understand the amplitude and geographical pattern of western Pacific mid-Holocene changes.
affiliations
1IPSL/LOCEAN, UPMC/CNRS/IRD/MNHN, Institut de recherche pour le développement France Nord, Bondy, France; claire.lazarethlocean-ipsl.upmc.fr
2University of Bordeaux, Environnements et Paléoenvironnements Océaniques et Continentaux, Talence, France
3Laboratoire d’Etudes en Géophysique et Océanographie Spatiales, Institut de Recherche pour le Développement, Toulouse, France
§To Guy, in memoriam
Selected references
Full reference list online under: pastglobalchanges.org/products/newsletters/ref2013_2.pdf
Braconnot P et al. (2007) Climate of the Past 3: 261-277
Corrège T (2006) Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology 232: 408-428
Delcroix T (1998) Bulletin de l'Institut Français d'Etudes Andines 27: 475-483
Duprey N et al. (2012) Paleoceanography 27, doi:10.1029/2012PA002350
Trenberth KE (1976) Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society 102: 639-653