All Stories

  1. Recent Increasing Trend in October–November Caribbean Tropical Cyclone Activity
  2. Breaking the link: warming disrupts early-season rainfall predictability in the Caribbean
  3. The Remarkable 2024 North Atlantic Mid-Season Hurricane Lull
  4. Interannual Variability of Tropical Cyclone Landfalls in the Eastern North Pacific: Environmental Drivers and Implications
  5. Interannual Variability of Tropical Cyclone Landfalls in the Eastern North Pacific: Environmental Drivers and Implications
  6. The 2023 Atlantic Hurricane Season: An Above-Normal Season despite Strong El Niño Conditions
  7. Inter‐Basin Versus Intra‐Basin Sea Surface Temperature Forcing of the Western North Pacific Subtropical High's Westward Extensions
  8. Hurricane forecast points to a dangerous 2024 Atlantic season, with La Niña and a persistently warm ocean teaming up to power fierce storms
  9. Inter-basin versus intra-basin sea surface temperature forcing of the Western North Pacific subtropical high’s westward extensions
  10. Recent advances in seasonal and multi-annual tropical cyclone forecasting
  11. Predicting summertime Atlantic hurricane activity with wintertime Rossby wave breaking
  12. Caution assessing trends in "off-season" storms without also assessing trends in "in-season" storms
  13. Tropical and Subtropical North Atlantic Vertical Wind Shear and Seasonal Tropical Cyclone Activity
  14. Estimating damages from climate-related natural disasters for the Caribbean at 1.5 °C and 2 °C global warming above preindustrial levels
  15. Future Caribbean Climates in a World of Rising Temperatures: The 1.5 vs 2.0 Dilemma
  16. Future Caribbean temperature and rainfall extremes from statistical downscaling
  17. North Atlantic TC Frequency and the Caribbean Low Level Jet