The link between CMIP5 model biases and the simulation of North Atlantic decadal variability

Matthew Menary1,2, Dan Hodson2, Jon Robson2, Rowan Sutton3, Richard A. Wood4 and Jonathan A Hunt1, (1)Met Office Hadley center for Climate Change, Exeter, United Kingdom, (2)University of Reading, Reading, United Kingdom, (3)University of Reading, National Centre for Atmospheric Science, Reading, United Kingdom, (4)Met Office Hadley Centre, Exeter, United Kingdom
Abstract:
Instrumental observations, palaeo-proxies, and climate models suggest significant decadal variability within the North Atlantic subpolar gyre (NASPG). However, a poorly sampled observational record and a diversity of model behaviours mean that the precise nature and mechanisms of this variability are unclear. Here, we analyse an exceptionally large multi-model ensemble of 42 present-generation climate models to test whether NASPG mean state biases systematically affect the representation of decadal variability. We find that temperature and salinity biases in the Labrador Sea co-vary and influence whether density variability is controlled by temperature or salinity variations. Ocean horizontal resolution is a good predictor of the biases and the location of the dominant dynamical feedbacks within the NASPG. However, we find no link to the spectral characteristics of the variability. Our results suggest that the mean state and mechanisms of variability within the NASPG are not independent. This represents an important caveat for decadal predictions using anomaly-assimilation methods.