After getting off to a relatively quiet start, tornado season in the United States is picking up steam, with experts predicting that conditions are ripe for a supercharged storm season.

The forecast for an active tornado season is being driven by a strong La Niña, a naturally occurring climate pattern that creates favorable storm conditions across the southern U.S. This is of particular concern to scientists because some of the country’s most severe tornado outbreaks have happened during La Niña events, including the 2011 tornado season, which was one of the costliest and deadliest in recorded history.

Tornado activity has already increased in recent weeks, but the season is expected to ramp up considerably in April, said Victor Gensini, an associate professor of atmospheric sciences at Northern Illinois University.

“We’re likely going to see another significant event this week in vulnerable areas like Mississippi and Alabama, and then things are likely going to be pretty active next month,” he said.

The most significant driver of this uptick in activity is La Niña, Gensini said, which is characterized by cooler-than-average waters off the western coast of South America that then influence weather patterns around the world.

La Niña — similar to its counterpart, El Niño — affects the positioning of the jet stream, a ribbon of fast-moving air that is powered by temperature differences between the cooler polar region to the north and warmer air masses to the south.

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“One of the things that La Niña does is it tends to result in a more wavy jet stream,” said Jana Houser, an associate professor of meteorology at Ohio University. “That inherently implies that you have a more active atmosphere, and you also tend to have a larger degree of atmospheric instability when the jet stream is wavy.”

A wavier jet stream also boosts wind shear, which is the change in wind speed and direction with height in the atmosphere. All these ingredients combined can result in powerful thunderstorms, Houser said.

The return of La Niña in 2021 has drawn some comparisons to another La Niña year: the 2011 season, when there were more than 1,600 tornadoes in the U.S., including the devastating tornado that ripped through Joplin, Missouri. The 2011 season still ranks as one of the deadliest on record, with 551 recorded deaths due to tornadoes, but Houser said it’s premature to expect that same level of intensity this year.

Scott Anderson reaches for a piece of debris near his heavily damaged home after a massive tornado passed through the town killing at least 132 people on May 27, 2011, in Joplin, Mo.Mario Tama / Getty Images file

“People always want something concrete to compare things to, but if you put all the models together, the most accurate estimate is that we probably won’t have quite as severe a La Niña event as we saw in 2011,” she said. “Drought cycles also play a very strong role in governing tornado events, and we have dryer conditions this year than we had in 2011.”

There are also some early indications that La Niña may start weakening in the late spring and early summer, Houser said.

But La Niña is not the only thing meteorologists are monitoring. A cycle known as the Madden-Julian Oscillation, a tropical weather pattern that recurs every 30 to 60 days, may also enhance or mitigate tornado activity across the country, Gensini said. Fluctuations associated with the Madden-Julian Oscillation can influence climate and weather events around the world, including the frequency of tornadoes, floods and tropical cyclones.

“It’s not as easy as pointing to one thing that’s the culprit,” Gensini said. “It’s like how there are a lot of different instruments playing in an orchestra and at any given time, any of those instruments can be playing louder than the others.”

Shandie Spencer, right, hugs a volunteer while recovering items from the basement of her destroyed home, where she was trapped after riding out the massive tornado that killed at least 132 people, on May 26, 2011, in Joplin, Mo.Mario Tama / Getty Images

Also challenging is singling out the importance of any one of those factors at play. This can make it hard for scientists to tease out precisely how climate change, for instance, is affecting tornado seasons.

Studies have shown that global warming is increasing the number of days with atmospheric instability that could give rise to storms. But at the same time, strong wind shear is forecasted to decrease in a warming climate, said William Gallus, a professor of meteorology at Iowa State University.

“The net effect is that on the days that have a lot of energy for thunderstorms, the atmosphere is able to come up with enough wind shear to create environments that look like they could lead to more intense tornado outbreaks,” Gallus said.

In other words, climate change is not necessarily fueling more tornado outbreaks on more days, but rather loading the dice for more intense outbreaks and storms to occur on days when conditions are favorable.

With this year’s forecast calling for an active tornado season, Gensini warned that people should make preparations early, particularly those who are in vulnerable housing situations.

“Regardless of El Niño or La Niña and all the other moving parts, it only takes one tornado to make for a really bad day,” he said. “We’re saying it’s going to be an above average year, but any tornado is a bad tornado if it injures or kills somebody.”

Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com

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