Subbasin Forecasts of Seasonal Atlantic Hurricane Activity: Skill and Challenges
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2025
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Details
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Journal Title:Weather and Forecasting
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Personal Author:
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NOAA Program & Office:NWS (National Weather Service) ; OAR (Oceanic and Atmospheric Research) ; AOML (Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory) ; CIMAS (Cooperative Institute for Marine and Atmospheric Studies) ; CPC (Climate Prediction Center) ; NCEP (National Centers for Environmental Prediction) ; NGI (Northern Gulf Institute)
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Description:Seasonal North Atlantic tropical cyclone (TC) activity is largely regulated by El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO), Atlantic meridional mode (AMM) and Atlantic multidecadal variability (AMV), and the associated difference in sea surface temperatures (SSTs) between the Atlantic main development region (10°–20°N, 60°–20°W) and the equatorial Pacific. However, the fluctuating amplitudes and phases of ENSO, AMM, and other climate modulators contribute to a spatial inhomogeneity of seasonal hurricane activity throughout the North Atlantic basin, over which TC impacts may vary significantly. For instance, ENSO is known to modulate Atlantic vertical wind shear more acutely in the western tropical North Atlantic, thus influencing TC development in close proximity to the United States. Additionally, Atlantic Niño has recently been shown to enhance the development of powerful TCs in the eastern tropical North Atlantic. Therefore, analysis of subbasin seasonal TC activity would enable the development of “user-oriented” outlooks (e.g., U.S. Gulf Coast energy sector) to better inform regional stakeholder interests. While seasonal outlooks of North Atlantic hurricane activity have been available for decades, skilled predictions of subbasin TC activity have been elusive and are not yet incorporated in official seasonal forecasts. We refine the Pacific–Atlantic interbasin SST relationship to develop seasonal probabilistic outlooks targeting the operational forecast criteria of NOAA’s Seasonal Atlantic Hurricane Outlook (i.e., terciles of below-, near-, and above-normal TC activity) for five specific North Atlantic subbasins (e.g., Caribbean, U.S. Gulf Coast, U.S. East Coast, subtropical North Atlantic, and tropical North Atlantic). We find skill in forecasting seasonal subbasin accumulated cyclone energy for above- and below-normal seasons using SST predictors from the North American Multimodel Ensemble, though strong correlations between the subbasin forecasts limit the predictive usefulness. Overall, there are marginal improvements in forecasting subbasin seasonal TC activity when compared with a “full-basin” forecast, with the Caribbean achieving the most substantial increase in probabilistic forecast skill.
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Source:Weather and Forecasting, 40(11), 2225-2238
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DOI:
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ISSN:0882-8156 ; 1520-0434
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Rights Information:Other
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Compliance:Submitted
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Main Document Checksum:urn:sha-512:8deb043ac48a38bdc65bdc715d7eed3bc406d47caf5d869349044857ef7d847dfd60cbd9f09148177ac876e76d95e475c9f7dcbb90de12ed23b0efc2671274fb
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