Author
Listed:
- Pedro N. DiNezio
(University of Colorado Boulder)
- Timothy M. Shanahan
(The University of Texas at Austin)
- Tianyi Sun
(Environmental Defense Fund)
- Chijun Sun
(University of California, Davis)
- Xian Wu
(The University of Texas at Dallas)
- Allison Lawman
(Colorado College)
- David Lea
(University of California)
- Masa Kageyama
(l’Environnement/Institut Pierre-Simon-Laplace)
- Ute Merkel
(University of Bremen)
- Matthias Prange
(University of Bremen)
- Bette Otto-Bliesner
(National Center for Atmospheric Research)
- Xu Zhang
(British Antarctic Survey)
Abstract
Projections of tropical rainfall under global warming remain highly uncertain1,2, largely because of an unclear climate response to a potential weakening of the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC)3. Although an AMOC slowdown can substantially alter tropical rainfall patterns4–8, the physical mechanisms linking high-latitude changes to tropical hydroclimate are poorly understood11. Here we demonstrate that an AMOC slowdown drives widespread shifts in tropical rainfall through the propagation of high-latitude cooling into the tropical North Atlantic. We identify and validate this mechanism using climate model simulations and palaeoclimate records from Heinrich Stadial 1 (HS1)—a past period marked by pronounced AMOC weakening9,10. In models, prevailing easterly and westerly winds communicate the climate signal to the Pacific Ocean and Indian Ocean through the transport of cold air generated over the tropical and subtropical North Atlantic. Air–sea interactions transmit the response across the Pacific Ocean and Indian Ocean, altering rainfall patterns as far as Indonesia, the tropical Andes and northern Australia. A similar teleconnection emerges under global warming scenarios, producing a consistent multi-model pattern of tropical hydroclimatic change. These palaeo-validated projections show widespread drying across Mesoamerica, the Amazon and West Africa, highlighting an elevated risk of severe drought for vulnerable human and ecological systems.
Suggested Citation
Pedro N. DiNezio & Timothy M. Shanahan & Tianyi Sun & Chijun Sun & Xian Wu & Allison Lawman & David Lea & Masa Kageyama & Ute Merkel & Matthias Prange & Bette Otto-Bliesner & Xu Zhang, 2025.
"Tropical response to ocean circulation slowdown raises future drought risk,"
Nature, Nature, vol. 644(8077), pages 676-683, August.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:nature:v:644:y:2025:i:8077:d:10.1038_s41586-025-09319-x
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-025-09319-x
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