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Study Guide: AP Environmental Science: El Niño and La Niña (ENSO)
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AP Environmental Science: El Niño and La Niña (ENSO)

By Fatskills Exam Guides Team — the exam nerds behind 28,500+ quizzes and 2.1M practice questions across 500+ global exams.

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AP Environmental Science – El Niño and La Niña (ENSO)

AP Environmental Science Study Guide: El Niño and La Niña (ENSO)


What This Is

El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) is a natural climate cycle in the tropical Pacific Ocean that shifts global weather patterns every 2–7 years. It has two phases: El Niño (warm phase) and La Niña (cool phase). ENSO disrupts ocean currents, trade winds, and atmospheric circulation, leading to extreme weather—droughts, floods, hurricanes, and even economic impacts (e.g., crop failures, fisheries collapse). On the AP exam, ENSO is a high-frequency topic in Unit 4 (Earth Systems) and Unit 5 (Land and Water Use), often tied to climate change, agriculture, and biodiversity.

Real-world example: The 1997–98 El Niño caused $35 billion in damages worldwide—flooding in Peru, droughts in Indonesia, and record-breaking U.S. storms. Meanwhile, the 2010–11 La Niña contributed to Australia’s worst floods in 50 years and a severe U.S. tornado season.


Key Terms & Concepts

  • ENSO (El Niño-Southern Oscillation): A natural climate cycle in the tropical Pacific involving changes in ocean temperatures, trade winds, and atmospheric pressure. It has three phases: El Niño, La Niña, and neutral.
  • El Niño: The warm phase of ENSO. Weakened trade winds reduce upwelling, warming the eastern Pacific. Causes droughts in Australia/Indonesia and flooding in the Americas.
  • La Niña: The cool phase of ENSO. Stronger trade winds enhance upwelling, cooling the eastern Pacific. Causes droughts in the southern U.S. and flooding in Australia/Indonesia.
  • Walker Circulation: The normal atmospheric circulation over the tropical Pacific. Warm air rises over the western Pacific (Indonesia), flows east, and sinks over the eastern Pacific (South America).
  • Southern Oscillation Index (SOI): A measure of air pressure differences between Tahiti (eastern Pacific) and Darwin, Australia (western Pacific). Negative SOI = El Niño; Positive SOI = La Niña.
  • Upwelling: The rising of cold, nutrient-rich water from the deep ocean to the surface. Critical for marine ecosystems (e.g., Peru’s anchovy fisheries).
  • Thermocline: The boundary layer between warm surface water and cold deep water. El Niño flattens it; La Niña steepens it.
  • Teleconnections: Global climate impacts linked to ENSO (e.g., weaker Atlantic hurricanes during El Niño, stronger during La Niña).
  • ENSO Neutral: When neither El Niño nor La Niña is active. Trade winds and ocean temperatures are near average.
  • Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO): A longer-term (20–30 year) climate pattern that can amplify or dampen ENSO effects.

Step-by-Step: How to Analyze ENSO on the AP Exam

  1. Identify the Phase
  2. Look for ocean temperature anomalies (warmer = El Niño; cooler = La Niña).
  3. Check trade wind strength (weak = El Niño; strong = La Niña).
  4. Note SOI values (negative = El Niño; positive = La Niña).

  5. Predict Regional Impacts

  6. El Niño:
    • Droughts in Australia, Indonesia, Southeast Africa.
    • Flooding in Peru, Ecuador, southern U.S.
    • Weaker Atlantic hurricanes (due to wind shear).
  7. La Niña:

    • Flooding in Australia, Indonesia, northern South America.
    • Droughts in southern U.S., Argentina.
    • Stronger Atlantic hurricanes (less wind shear).
  8. Connect to Ecosystems & Human Systems

  9. Marine life: El Niño reduces upwelling-fewer nutrients-fish populations crash (e.g., Peru’s anchovy fisheries).
  10. Agriculture: Droughts/floods disrupt crops (e.g., coffee in Brazil, wheat in Australia).
  11. Economics: Insurance losses, food price spikes, infrastructure damage (e.g., 2015–16 El Niño cost California $2.7 billion in agricultural losses).

  12. Compare to Climate Change

  13. Climate change may intensify ENSO (more extreme El Niños/La Niñas).
  14. But ENSO is natural—climate change is human-caused.

Common Mistakes

  • Mistake: Confusing El Niño with global warming.
  • Correction: El Niño is a natural cycle, while global warming is long-term, human-caused. However, climate change may amplify ENSO’s effects.

  • Mistake: Thinking La Niña always follows El Niño.

  • Correction: ENSO phases are irregular—sometimes neutral years occur between them.

  • Mistake: Assuming all regions experience the same impacts.

  • Correction: ENSO has opposite effects in different places (e.g., drought in Australia during El Niño, floods in Peru).

  • Mistake: Forgetting upwelling’s role in fisheries.

  • Correction: El Niño reduces upwelling-fewer nutrients-fish populations decline (e.g., Peru’s anchovy industry collapses).

  • Mistake: Ignoring teleconnections (global impacts).

  • Correction: ENSO affects hurricane seasons, monsoons, and even European weather.

AP Exam Insights

Frequently Tested: - FRQs often ask for: - Impacts on agriculture, fisheries, or human health (e.g., "Explain how El Niño affects Peru’s anchovy industry"). - Comparisons between El Niño and La Niña (e.g., "Contrast the effects of El Niño and La Niña on U.S. weather"). - Connections to climate change (e.g., "How might climate change alter ENSO patterns?"). - Multiple-choice traps: - Misidentifying phases (e.g., "Which phase causes drought in Australia?"-El Niño). - Confusing upwelling with downwelling (upwelling = cold, nutrient-rich water rising). - Overlooking economic impacts (e.g., "Which industry is most affected by El Niño?"-fisheries).

Tricky Distinction: - ENSO vs. PDO: ENSO is short-term (2–7 years), while PDO is long-term (20–30 years). Both influence Pacific temperatures but operate on different timescales.


Quick Check Questions

1. Multiple Choice

Which of the following is a direct impact of El Niño on marine ecosystems? (A) Increased coral bleaching due to warmer waters (B) Higher phytoplankton productivity from enhanced upwelling (C) Stronger trade winds leading to more nutrient mixing (D) Cooler ocean temperatures in the eastern Pacific

Answer: (A) Explanation: El Niño warms the eastern Pacific, which can stress coral reefs (bleaching) and reduce upwelling (fewer nutrients for phytoplankton).


2. Short FRQ (2 pts)

Describe TWO environmental impacts of La Niña on the United States.

Sample Answer:
1. Increased hurricane activity in the Atlantic due to reduced wind shear, leading to more frequent and intense storms.
2. Drought conditions in the southern U.S. (e.g., Texas, California) due to shifted jet streams and reduced rainfall.


Last-Minute Cram Sheet

  1. El Niño = warm eastern Pacific, weak trade winds, negative SOI.
  2. La Niña = cool eastern Pacific, strong trade winds, positive SOI.
  3. Upwelling = cold, nutrient-rich water rising-supports fisheries.
  4. El Niño-droughts in Australia/Indonesia, floods in Peru/southern U.S.
  5. La Niña-floods in Australia/Indonesia, droughts in southern U.S.
  6. ENSO disrupts fisheries (e.g., Peru’s anchovy collapse during El Niño).
  7. Teleconnections = global weather impacts (e.g., weaker Atlantic hurricanes in El Niño).
  8. SOI (Southern Oscillation Index) measures air pressure differences (Tahiti vs. Darwin).
  9. ENSO-climate change (natural cycle vs. human-caused warming).
  10. PDO = long-term Pacific climate pattern (20–30 years) that can amplify ENSO.