This study examines the response of the climate simulated by the Institut P
ierre Simon Laplace tropical Pacific coupled general circulation model to t
wo changes in parameterization: an improved coupling scheme at the coast, a
nd the introduction of a saturation mixing ratio limiter in the water vapor
advection scheme, which improves the rainfall distribution over and around
orography. The main effect of these modifications is the suppression of sp
urious upwelling off the South American coast in Northern Hemisphere summer
. Coupled feedbacks then extend this warming over the whole basin in an El
Nino-like structure, with a maximum at the equator and in the eastern part
of the basin. The mean precipitation pattern widens and moves equatorward a
s the trade winds weaken.
This warmer mean state leads to a doubling of the standard deviation of int
erannual SST anomalies, and to a longer ENSO period. The structure of the E
NSO cycle also shifts from westward propagation in the original simulation
to a standing oscillation. The simulation of El Nino thus improves when com
pared to recent observed events. The study of ENSO spatial structure and la
gged correlations shows that these changes of El Nino characteristics are c
aused by both the increase of amplitude and the modification of the spatial
structure of the wind stress response to SST anomalies.
These results show that both the mean state and variability of the tropical
ocean can be very sensitive to biases or forcings, even geographically loc
alized. They may also give some insight into the mechanisms responsible for
the changes in ENSO characteristics due to decadal variability or climate
change.