Investigating the effects of a subtropical stratocumulus cloud breakup in warm climates using cloud-locking experiments

Salazar, A., Medeiros, B., Zhu, J., Tziperman, E.. (2025). Investigating the effects of a subtropical stratocumulus cloud breakup in warm climates using cloud-locking experiments. Journal of Climate, doi:https://doi.org/10.1175/JCLI-D-24-0371.1

Title Investigating the effects of a subtropical stratocumulus cloud breakup in warm climates using cloud-locking experiments
Genre Article
Author(s) A. Salazar, Brian Medeiros, Jiang Zhu, E. Tziperman
Abstract In the warm, equable climate of the Eocene, constraints on CO 2 levels and low-latitude temperatures have generally precluded climate models from recreating key features of the climate, especially the above-freezing winter temperatures in the continental interiors suggested by fossil evidence of frost-intolerant species at high latitudes. Several cloud feedbacks have been suggested as mechanisms for enhanced wintertime warming, including a breakup of subtropical stratocumulus cloud decks at high CO 2 concentrations. It has been suggested that this breakup could lead to 8 K of global average warming, but how this low-latitude cloud feedback translates to high-latitude warming is not obvious and warrants quantification with a global climate model. In this study, we use cloud-locking experiments in the Community Earth System Model, version 2 (CESM2), in which homogeneous subtropical stratocumulus clouds are prescribed or completely removed to investigate the maximum warming achieved by a breakup of subtropical stratocumulus clouds in both a preindustrial and a high CO 2 climate. We use the present-day continental configuration and vegetation to make these results applicable to a future warm climate. We find that in the most dramatic case, the stratocumulus breakup leads to a significant globally averaged warming of about 4.5 K and contributes to some reduction in below-freezing days in the continental interiors at high latitudes. The resulting warming is limited by stabilizing low-cloud feedbacks induced elsewhere following the breakup. We conclude that a stratocumulus breakup may have played a nonnegligible role in past warm climates, even if it cannot, on its own, explain the key features of the Eocene.
Publication Title Journal of Climate
Publication Date Sep 1, 2025
Publisher's Version of Record https://doi.org/10.1175/JCLI-D-24-0371.1
OpenSky Citable URL https://n2t.net/ark:/85065/d7np28wn
OpenSky Listing View on OpenSky
CGD Affiliations CAS, PPC

< Back