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Poleward expansion of tropical cyclone latitudes in warming climates

Nature Geoscience, ISSN: 1752-0908, Vol: 15, Issue: 1, Page: 14-28
2022
  • 120
    Citations
  • 0
    Usage
  • 184
    Captures
  • 271
    Mentions
  • 1
    Social Media
Metric Options:   Counts1 Year3 Year

Metrics Details

  • Citations
    120
    • Citation Indexes
      118
    • Policy Citations
      2
      • Policy Citation
        2
  • Captures
    184
  • Mentions
    271
    • News Mentions
      263
      • News
        263
    • Blog Mentions
      4
      • Blog
        4
    • References
      4
      • Wikipedia
        4
  • Social Media
    1
    • Shares, Likes & Comments
      1
      • Facebook
        1

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Review Description

Tropical cyclones (TCs, also known as hurricanes and typhoons) generally form at low latitudes with access to the warm waters of the tropical oceans, but far enough off the equator to allow planetary rotation to cause aggregating convection to spin up into coherent vortices. Yet, current prognostic frameworks for TC latitudes make contradictory predictions for climate change. Simulations of past warm climates, such as the Eocene and Pliocene, show that TCs can form and intensify at higher latitudes than of those during pre-industrial conditions. Observations and model projections for the twenty-first century indicate that TCs may again migrate poleward in response to anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions, which poses profound risks to the planet’s most populous regions. Previous studies largely neglected the complex processes that occur at temporal and spatial scales of individual storms as these are poorly resolved in numerical models. Here we review this mesoscale physics in the context of responses to climate warming of the Hadley circulation, jet streams and Intertropical Convergence Zone. We conclude that twenty-first century TCs will most probably occupy a broader range of latitudes than those of the past 3 million years as low-latitude genesis will be supplemented with increasing mid-latitude TC favourability, although precise estimates for future migration remain beyond current methodologies.

Bibliographic Details

Joshua Studholme; Alexey V. Fedorov; Sergey K. Gulev; Kerry Emanuel; Kevin Hodges

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Earth and Planetary Sciences

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