BAMOS Vol 31 No.3 September 2018 | Page 9

Article The 2010/2011 Ningaloo Niño The worst marine heatwave to hit Western Australia in the preceding decade Ronni King Murdoch University The Ningaloo Niño marine heatwave caused mass destruction to the ecosystem along the coast of Western Australia in 2011. While the occurrence of a Ningaloo Niño event may be linked to a La Niña, the strength of this particular event was unprecedented, which saw sea surface temperatures rise by up to 2.5°C extending along the whole coastline. A particularly strong La Niña in the months leading into the Ningaloo Niño as a result of the negative Pacific Decadal Oscillation is associated with an unseasonably strong Leeuwin Current due to a lower meridional pressure gradient in the overlying atmosphere and weakening southerly wind anomalies, typical of an austral summer. An increase in water velocity helped transport masses of warm surface water further south than ever before. The driving forces behind the strengthened Leeuwin Current suggest this was the primary cause of the Ningaloo Niño marine heatwave. Figure 1 (right). Monthly anomalies for SST (°C) and geostrophic velocity (ms -1 ) for December, January, February and March (2009/2010–2010/2011). Arrow direction and length indicates water movement and strength. Images obtained from the Integrated Marine Observing System (IMOS) Ocean Current website 2017. BAMOS Sep 2018 9