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Indian Ocean Dipole Maintained by IOC  
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The Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) is a climate mode that occurs inter-annually in the tropical parts of the Indian Ocean. The IOD was not identified until 1999 by Professor Yamagata, Dr Saji and associates of the Climate Variations Program of Frontier Research System for Global Change, however, its occurrence can be traced through the coral record to the mid-Holocene period (the Holocene period dates from 11,000 years before present to present). Typical of climate oscillations, the IOD experiences a ‘positive’ phase and a ‘negative’ phase. During a positive IOD event, the sea-surface temperature (SST) drops in the southeastern part of the Indian Ocean: off the northern coast of Australia, the eastern coast of Japan and throughout Indonesia; while the SST rises in the western equatorial Indian Ocean: off the eastern coast of Africa, from the northern half of Madagascar to the northern edge of Somalia. Furthermore, convective patterns increase in the northern half of Africa, India and off the eastern coast of Africa. Inverse conditions exist during a negative IOD event, as illustrated below.
 
The negative IOD - which is, in effect, the reversal of the positive IOD - complete with increased convective activity over Australia, Indonesia and Japan.
 
Understanding ocean-atmospheric interactions that result in climate modes such as IOD will not only increase weather and climate forecasting capabilities in the Indian Ocean, it is and important part of understanding current global climate variability. Images courtesy of A.Suryachandra Rao of the Institute for Global Change Research, Yokohama City, Japan
 
 
 
 
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New Science Program to Focus on Restoring Ocean Health; $20M, Six- Year Effort Responds to National Calls for Improving Ocean Research
U.S. Newswire
03 August 2004

The Lenfest Foundation, Inc. today announced the establishment of the Lenfest Ocean Program, a six-year, $20 million applied research initiative, to further understanding of the causes, consequences and solutions to problems affecting the sea and to promote the sustainable management of ocean resources. The announcement comes at a time when scientists, fishermen, and policy makers alike are calling for increased support of ocean research.
Read more at http://releases.usnewswi ... -08032004.
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