Box 1: What are climate teleconnections?
Teleconnections, a term derived from “tele,” meaning “at a distance,” describe the phenomena where weather and climate patterns in one region are influenced by climate events occurring thousands of kilometers away. The study of these patterns helps scientists understand how different parts of the climate system are interconnected.
Teleconnections occur, in part, because the climate system is linked by planetary-scale circulation patterns called Rossby Waves [1]. Rossby Waves form as air and water move between warmer and colder regions. The Earth’s rotation steers these waves, forming undulating, river-like patterns in both the atmosphere and oceans [2]. Unlike the vertical motion of waves observed on a beach, Rossby waves primarily move horizontally and can extend across thousands of kilometers. Rossby waves can create persistent patterns of weather (high or low pressure) that are stable over weeks or even months. These circulation patterns can act like a seesaw: when pressure is high in one area, it tends to be lower in the connected region.