From: Michael Christie, Reuters
Published October 10, 2007 05:18 PM
Mixed Atlantic hurricane season puzzles experts
MIAMI (Reuters) -
Judge the 2007 Atlantic hurricane season by the 13 storms so far, and it
looks like a relatively busy year. But look at the number of days a
hurricane has swirled in the Atlantic, or use other measures of a storm
season's ferocity, and 2007 has been surprisingly benign.
Hurricane experts had predicted the season to be above-average because of
warm Atlantic sea surface temperatures, the continuance of a decades-long
natural period of increased storm activity, and the development of La Nina
weather conditions in the Pacific.
Many tropical waves, often a precursor of a tropical storm, developed in the
Atlantic over the busiest weeks of the season between September and early
October, and eight named tropical storms formed in September -- matching a
record for the month.
But apart from maximum-strength Hurricane Felix, which slammed into Central
America on September 4, most were exceedingly brief or weak, meaning
September only registered 3.5 days with a hurricane.
One noted hurricane forecasting team at Colorado State University had
predicted 20 hurricane days that month.
This year's storms caused relatively little damage and casualties especially
compared to the havoc inflicted in 2005, when Hurricane Katrina flooded New
Orleans, Wilma pummeled the Mexican resort of Cancun and Florida, and Rita
hit the Texas-Louisiana border area.
The main reason for the low number of hurricane days this year has been high
vertical wind shear -- the difference in windspeeds at different altitudes
-- which tears storms apart while they try to form, hurricane experts said.
Scientists are puzzled. A periodic cooling in sea temperatures in the
eastern equatorial Pacific, known as La Nina, is supposed to reduce shear
over the Atlantic.
"It's like everything else with hurricanes; every now and then the
scientists just have to scratch their heads," said Jeff Masters, co-founder
of the Weather Underground Web site.
END OF SEASON SURPRISE?
The U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said on Tuesday the
La Nina phenomenon had definitely kicked in and would be weak to moderate
this winter.
That could make the end of the six-month hurricane season, which began on
June 1, a little busier than one might otherwise expect because a normal
increase in late-season wind shear might be suppressed by La Nina, experts
said.
Gerry Bell of NOAA's Climate Prediction Center, which issues the U.S.
government's hurricane season forecasts and had called for between 13 and 16
named storms this year, said there was no anomaly in the total number of
storms.
"We've had 13 named storms, so that's certainly above normal," Bell said.
"Where we've been a bit low is on the hurricanes."
There have officially only been four hurricanes this season but many experts
expect Tropical Storm Karen to be upgraded to a hurricane in a post-season
analysis, pushing the number to five. The long-term average is for 10 to 11
named storms and six hurricanes per season.
Bell said that in addition to the shear, this year had seen a lot of
northwesterly flow in the upper atmosphere that had brought dry air over the
tropical Atlantic where many storms form. Storms don't like dry air as they
need moisture to grow.
"But the season isn't over," Bell cautioned.
But James Elsner, a Florida State University professor of geography who
analyzes hurricane forecasting, said: "We are getting to the end. If
something doesn't happen in the next two weeks it's basically over."
"I think what we have to question is why there was so much enthusiasm for
this season (in terms of the activity predicted)," he said.
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