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Science and the Sea Podcast

Stronger Waves

March 22, 20262 min · 269 words

Show notes

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Highlighted moments

African easterly waves give birth to about 60% of all tropical cyclones in the Atlantic, Caribbean, and Gulf, and more than 80% of the major ones.
Jump to 1:29 in the transcript
During La Nina years, the waves are stronger, wetter, and more turbulent, so they produce more thunderstorms.
Jump to 0:53 in the transcript
Over Africa, it appears to strengthen two jet streams, and it pushes one of them northward.
Jump to 1:14 in the transcript

Transcript

0:00Exploring Science in the Sea Most of the tropical storms that roar across the Atlantic Basin are born over Africa, especially the really big ones. They begin as low-pressure systems over the Sahara Desert and are pushed into the Atlantic Ocean by a powerful jet stream. La Nina may boost that process. A recent study found that it may help create stronger systems over Africa, potentially leading to stronger tropical storms.

0:33La Nina is part of a back-and-forth cycle in the eastern Pacific Ocean, from warmer to cooler waters. La Nina is the cooler phase, and it can impact climate across the globe. The study found a link between La Nina and African easterly waves, the systems that form over Africa and head out to sea. During La Nina years, the waves are stronger, wetter, and more turbulent, so they produce more thunderstorms. That brings heavier rains to parts of Africa, the Caribbean, and the Americas,

1:06even if the systems don't become tropical storms. La Nina changes the way air circulates across the entire planet. Over Africa, it appears to strengthen two jet streams, and it pushes one of them northward. It also has an effect on the African monsoon season. Those changes rev up the easterly waves and the intensity of hurricanes. African easterly waves give birth to about 60% of all tropical cyclones in the Atlantic, Caribbean, and Gulf, and more than 80% of the major ones.

1:40So understanding the link between La Nina and the waves could improve hurricane season forecasts. Science in the Sea is available as a weekly podcast at scienceinthesea.org. I'm Holly Brawley.

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