The 2017 coastal El Niño
Resumen
The original concept of El Niño consisted of anomalously high sea surface temperature and heavy rainfall along the arid
northern coast of Peru (Carranza 1891; Carrillo 1893). The concept evolved into the El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO;
Bjerknes 1969), although the original El Niño and the Southern Oscillation do not necessarily have the same variability (Deser
and Wallace 1987), and the strong El Niño episode in early 1925 coincided with cold-to-neutral ENSO conditions (Takahashi and Martínez 2017). To distinguish the near-coastal El Niño from the warm ENSO phase, Peru operationally defines
the “coastal El Niño” based on the seasonal Niño 1+2 SST anomaly (ENFEN 2012; L’Heureux et al. 2017). While recent
attention has been brought to the concept of ENSO diversity (e.g., “central Pacific” vs “eastern Pacific” events; Capotondi
et al. 2015), the coastal El Niño represents another facet of ENSO that requires further study in terms of its mechanisms
and predictability.
A strong coastal El Niño developed off the coast of Peru from January to April 2017 (ENFEN 2017; WMO 2017a,b;
Takahashi and Martínez 2017; Ramírez and Briones 2017; Garreaud 2018). The changes were dramatic within the cool
coastal upwelling region, as daily SST at Puerto Chicama (7.8°S, 79.1°W) increased abruptly from ~17°C by mid-January to a
peak of 26.9°C in early February (ENFEN 2017). The mean maximum/minimum air temperature anomalies along the coast
ranged between +1.0°C and +2.3°C across the north, central, and southern regions during February–March.
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