Resumen
The Galápagos Islands, located in the eastern equatorial Pacific approximately 1000 km west of mainland Ecuador, are highly sensitive to the El Niño–Southern Oscillation. However, the mechanisms linking sea surface temperature (SST) variability to daily rainfall extremes remain poorly understood. Focusing on Santa Cruz Island, one of the main islands of the archipelago, we analyzed the response of daily rainfall to four El Niño events (1991–1992, 1997–1998, 2015–2016 and 2023–2024) and their relationship with SST spatial patterns. Our approach followed three steps: (1) Daily rainfall observations were classified using percentile thresholds; (2) SST spatial clusters were identified using Local Indicators of Spatial Association (LISA), which explicitly incorporates spatial autocorrelation to distinguish warm and cold SST spatial clusters; and (3) SST cluster metrics (mean temperature, spatial extent, and persistence) were extracted and related to rainfall intensification. Results show that El Niño can increase daily extreme rainfall (>P95) in frequency and in totals, with the strongest and most persistent signal during 1997–1998; in contrast, the 2015–2016 event, despite being classified as very strong by the Oceanic Niño Index (ONI), exhibited a limited and short-lived >P95 rainfall response in Santa Cruz. The link between SST clusters and extreme rainfall strengthened during El Niño (r from ~0.40 to 0.70). Correspondingly, SST clusters underwent significant spatial reorganization in their extent and persistence. Contrasts were most evident in the central–southern domain, where 1997–1998 showed strong warm incursion and persistent ≥28 °C coverage, while 2015–2016 remained more spatially constrained and less coherent. The area where clusters reached mean SST ≥ 28 °C became widespread in 1997–1998 (98.55%), whereas it remained more localized in 1991–1992 (30.28%), 2015–2016 (27.02%), and 2023–2024 (26.55%) and was absent in neutral years (0%). Persistent warm-cluster coverage increased from neutral conditions (38.53%) in 1991–1992 (47.49%), 1997–1998 (53.42%), and 2023–2024 (42.97%), but was lower in 2015–2016 (34.53%). Overall, these results provide a process-oriented link between SST cluster organization and event-to-event differences in Galápagos rainfall extremes, highlighting the value of local SST metrics beyond basin-scale ENSO indices.
| Idioma original | Inglés |
|---|---|
| Número de artículo | 395 |
| Páginas (desde-hasta) | 1-29 |
| Número de páginas | 29 |
| Publicación | Atmosphere |
| Volumen | 17 |
| N.º | 4 |
| DOI | |
| Estado | Publicada - 14 abr. 2026 |
Palabras clave
- Galápagos Islands
- El Niño events
- Extreme rainfalls
- Sea surface temperature structures
- Spatial clusters
Huella
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