The recurring climate events El Ni?o and La Ni?a trigger long-lived changes to weather around the world
The recurring climate events El Ni?o and La Ni?a trigger long-lived changes to weather around the world
By Stephen Ornes
Web edition: February 8, 2013
EnlargeDuring a climate event known as El Ni?o (shown on the left), the surface of the central and eastern Pacific Ocean warms along the equator (red). During a La Ni?a event (on the right), the same region cools (blue).
Credit: NOAA
Scientists have been trying to understand what triggers some particularly widespread and dramatic changes to weather, such as droughts and major flooding. These changes may last a year or more and play out broadly across much of the planet. Increasingly, events known as El Ni?o?and La Ni?a appear to play a major role. The terms mean the little boy and little girl (in Spanish).
Occasionally, as in 1998, the two events happen back-to-back. That time, when these climate kids were through, as much as 10 percent of the world's coral had died from heat stress.
In recent years, the average temperature of the planet has been climbing, something known as global warming. Will that heat alter the arrival or intensity of weather extremes associated with the "kids"?That is something that scientists are probing as they seek to better understand?Earth?s changing climate.
Visit the new?Science News for Kids?
Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/348184/title/FOR_KIDS_Climates_troublesome_kids
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