- 1Key Laboratory of Ocean Circulation and Waves, Institute of Oceanology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Qingdao, China
- 2Pilot National Laboratory for Marine Science and Technology, Qingdao, China
- 3University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China
- 4Center for Ocean Mega-Science, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Qingdao, China
Interannual variability of the North Equatorial Current (NEC)/Undercurrent (NEUC) in the northwestern Pacific was investigated with the mooring array measurements at 130°E during 2014-2021, in combination with the satellite altimetry. Mooring observations indicate that the velocity of the NEC/NEUC in the upper 900 m exhibits significant variations on the interannual time scale. The westward-flowing NEC strengthens when the underlying eastward-flowing NEUC weakens, and the NEUC branch at 8.5°N is intensified during the mature phase of El Niño and reaches the maximum velocity during the decay phase of El Niño. The phase of the interannual variation of the currents delays with the increasing latitude, with the signal at 15°N lagging that at 8.5°N by about one year. Based on a 1.5 layer reduced gravity model, the interannual variation is suggested to be controlled mainly by the westward propagating baroclinic Rossby wave induced by the wind stress curl forcing in the central Pacific. Different propagating speed of the baroclinic Rossby wave at different latitudes explains the meridional phase lag of the interannual signal. Empirical Orthogonal Function and vertical mode decomposition analysis suggest that the interannual variation of the NEC/NEUC velocity in the northern part is dominated by surface-intensified signals with a vertical structure of the first baroclinic mode, while that in the southern part is dominated by subsurface-intensified signals which is associated with the combination of the first two baroclinic modes. The low-order mode baroclinic response of the ocean to the wind forcing accounts for the interannual fluctuation of the NEC/NEUC velocity observed by the mooring array.
Introduction
The northwestern tropical Pacific Ocean has a complex three-dimensional ocean circulation system, including the wind-driven currents like the westward-flowing North Equatorial Current (NEC), northward-flowing Kuroshio Current (KC), and southward-flowing Mindanao Current (MC), as well as the subsurface current system beneath them, such as the eastward-flowing North Equatorial Undercurrent (NEUC), southward-flowing Luzon Undercurrent (LUC), and northward-flowing Mindanao Undercurrent (MUC) (e.g., Lukas et al., 1991; Hu et al., 2015). Among others, the NEC, as the boundary of the tropical and subtropical gyres and the origin of the low latitudes western boundary currents, play crucial roles in mass and heat exchange between the mid- and low-latitude North Pacific Ocean, and are of particular importance for understanding the ocean and climate variability (e.g., Qiu et al., 2015b).
Many studies have focused on the characteristics and variability of the NEC on different time scales with hydrographic observations, satellite altimetry and numerical models. The NEC is a stable westward current which is confined between 8°N and 17°N in the surface layer and could extend to 28°N with the increasing depth (e.g., Nitani, 1972; Qiu et al., 2015b). On the seasonal time scale, several studies demonstrated different variations of NEC based on direct/indirect measurements or model simulations, and the difference was mainly attributed to the discrepancy among different datasets, along with the phase lag of the annual cycle across the basin (e.g., Qiu and Joyce, 1992; Donguy and Meyers, 1996; Qiu and Lukas, 1996; Qu and Lukas, 2003; Kim et al., 2004; Wang et al., 2019). They generally associated the dynamics of seasonal variation with local or remote wind forcing through Ekman pumping or propagation of Rossby/Kelvin waves (e.g., Kessler, 1990; Qiu and Lukas, 1996; Ueki et al., 2003; Chen and Wu, 2011; Wang et al., 2019; Liu and Zhou, 2020).
On the interannual time scale, the NEC variation was generally believed to be closely related to El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO). Studies found that the NEC bifurcation, where the western boundary currents change direction, migrated north during El Niño and south during La Niña, while the NEC transport increased in El Niño and decreased in La Niña, which was mainly ascribed to the westward propagating baroclinic Rossby waves generated by anomalous winds in the central Pacific (e.g., Qiu and Joyce, 1992; Qiu and Lukas, 1996; Kim et al., 2004; Kashino et al., 2009; Zhai and Hu, 2012; Zhang et al., 2017b; Azminuddin et al., 2019). Nevertheless, there were also some studies suggesting that not all extremes of the NEC transport were correlated with ENSO events (e.g., Qiu and Lukas, 1996; Zhai and Hu, 2013; Qiu et al., 2015b).
In comparison, the understanding of NEUC remains fragmentary due to the lack of in-situ observations. Based on several CTD transects, Wang et al. (1998) observed the eastward flow under the NEC and named it as NEUC. Using recently accumulating profiling floats, Qiu et al. (2013b) presented the basin-scale structure of NEUC, and suggested that there were three quasi-steady eastward jets under the NEC at 9°N, 13°N, and 18°N, which were called NEUC jets. Regarding the formation mechanism of NEUC jets, Qiu et al. (2013a) proposed it was related to ‘turbulent Sverdrup balance’. The meridional convergence of eddy flux generates the time-mean zonal jets, and the eddies are sourced from wind-driven annual baroclinic Rossby waves in the eastern Pacific through triad interactions. Furthermore, limited observations and numerical simulations demonstrated significant temporal variations of the NEUC. Repeat underwater glider observations during 2009-2014 indicated that the NEUC was strong and had a greater width when the NEC at the surface was weak (Schönau and Rudnick, 2015). Based on 39-year high-resolution LASG/IAP (State Key Laboratory of Numerical Modelling for Atmospheric Sciences and Geophysical Fluid Dynamics/Institute of Atmospheric Physics) Climate Ocean Model (LICOM) simulation, Li et al. (2018) suggested that the NEUC transport exhibited pronounced interannual and decadal variations with periods of 2-7 years and 13-19 years, which were in connection with ENSO and Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO), respectively. By analyzing 48-year hydrographic observations at 137°E from the Japan Meteorological Agency, Ishizaki et al. (2019) reported that NEUC had significant interdecadal variability, which was divided into two branches from 1967 to 1976/77, merged into one from 1976/77 to 1997/98, and separated into two branches again after that.
Previous studies on the NEC paid more attention to the integrated transport crossing a certain meridional section. In fact, the NEC is a very broad flow. Due to the β effect, the response of such a broad flow to wind forcing is different at different latitudes, which was often neglected by previous studies. Limited by the lack of in-situ observations, studies on the NEUC often relied on model simulations, which hampered our understanding of the NEUC variability and its relationship with the overlying NEC and ENSO events. To unveil the multi-scale variability of the NEC and NEUC, a mooring array including 5 moorings was deployed at 130°E between 8°-18°N by NPOCE (Northwestern Pacific Ocean Circulation and Climate) program since September 2014 (Hu et al., 2011; Hu et al., 2020). Recent studies used the mooring measurements before January 2018 and investigated the intraseasonal and seasonal variability of the NEC and NEUC (Zhang et al., 2017a; Wang et al., 2019; Wang et al., 2022). In this work, we further extended the mooring measurements to December 2021 and explored the interannual variability of the NEC/NEUC at different latitudes along 130°E.
The rest of the paper is organized as follows. Section 2 describes the data and methods. Section 3 presents the mean structure and interannual variability of the NEC/NEUC. The meridional phase lag and vertical structure of the interannual signal are also depicted and investigated in Section 3. Section 4 includes a brief summary and discussion.
Data and method
A mooring array including 5 subsurface moorings were designed along 130°E in the northwestern Pacific to measure the structure and variations of the NEC/NEUC, and the water depth is approximately 5500 m (Figure 1). These moorings were deployed at 8°N, 10.5°N, 13°N, 15.5°N and 18°N in September 2014 and retrieved after one year. After that, the moorings were moved to 8.5°N, 11°N, 12.5°N, 15°N and 17.5°N in the cruise of September 2015 in order to better capture the NEUC jets, which were retrieved every year since then.
Figure 1 Location of the subsurface mooring array at 130°E. Black triangles denote the moorings deployed during September 2014 and September 2015 at 10.5°N, 13°N, 15.5°N and 18°N, red circles represent the moorings deployed during September 2015 and December 2021 at 8.5°N, 11°N, 12.5°N, and 15°N, and green circle represents the mooring deployed during September 2015 and January 2018 at 17.5°N. The mean ocean circulation system in this region is shown by red and blue arrows. NEC, NECC, STCC, KC, MC, NEUC, LUC, MUC, ME, and ITF stand for North Equatorial Current, North Equatorial Countercurrent, Subtropical Countercurrent, Kuroshio Current, Mindanao Current, North Equatorial Undercurrent, Luzon Undercurrent, Mindanao Undercurrent, Mindanao Eddy, and Indonesian Throughflow, respectively.
Each mooring was equipped with two RD Instruments (RDI) 75-kHz Acoustic Doppler Current Profilers (ADCPs) on the main float at the depth of 450 m, one of which looks upward and the other looks downward to collect the velocity data hourly. The standard bin size is 8 m, and the two ADCPs are able to capture the currents in the upper 900 m. In this work, the velocity raw data was first processed with standard quality control procedures, and the data with Percent Good 4 (PG4) value (a measure of the percentage of good data collected by the four beams of the ADCP) less than 85% was removed. Then, the hourly velocity was interpolated vertically onto 10 m intervals, and was daily averaged to remove tidal signals. The measurements above 40 m were dropped due to their large biases produced by the backscattering noise from the sea surface. It should be noted that there are one mooring lost and a couple of ADCPs failing to record the data due to instrument damages. Details of the moorings that have ADCP records are listed in Table 1. For convenience, all the records from nine moorings were processed onto five mooring sites at 8.5°N, 11°N, 12.5°N, 15°N, and 17.5°N. In detail, we made corrections to the mooring data at 10.5°N, 13°N, 15.5°N and 18°N before September 2015 by considering the meridional structure of the mean zonal flow at 130°E derived from high-resolution (0.25°×0.25°) T/S profiles of World Ocean Atlas 2018 (WOA18, Garcia et al., 2019). For example, the meridional difference of mean zonal flow between 10.5°N and 11°N was estimated first with WOA18. Then, the mooring data at 10.5°N before September 2015 was corrected with this meridional difference, and the obtained results was considered to be the velocity information at 11°N. Further, the data was merged with the ADCP measurements at 11°N after September 2015. Similar corrections were also made to the ADCP measurements at other latitudes. In addition, several discrete single-point current meters (CMs) distributed between 1000-4000 m on each mooring, including Nortek Aquadopp, ALEC and Aanderaa Seaguard current meters. The vertical interval between these current meters is about 500 m. Their observation period is the same as that of the ADCPs mentioned above, and the sampling period is 1 hour. These CM records will be used in the vertical mode projection in Section 3.4. The vertical mode projection needs the time series of velocity profile over the full depth. But the deep current meter records at 12.5°N for 2019 are abnormal due to instrumental malfunctions, and the current meter records at 17.5°N are only above 1400 m, which are insufficient for the projection. Considering better vertical coverage and continuity of the time series, the current meter records at 8.5°N, 11°N and 15°N were used in the vertical mode projection. Since this work mainly focuses on the interannual variations of the NEC/NEUC, the mooring data were therefore smoothed with a 1-year low-pass filter (moving average) to remove the intraseasonal and seasonal signals, and the values in the first 6 months and last 5 months were abandoned due to the bias near the endpoints of the time series caused by the filter. The filtered time series were used in the following analysis.
The gridded Sea Surface Height (SSH) and geostrophic currents from the AVISO (Archiving, Validation, and Interpretation of Satellite Oceanographic) products were also utilized in this study. This dataset merges measurements from different satellites such as Topex/Poseidon, European Remote Sensing Satellite-1 (ERS-1), ERS-2, Geosat Follow-On, Jason-1 and Jason-2. The daily data with the resolution of 0.25°×0.25° for the period of 2001-2021 was downloaded from the Copernicus Marine Environment Monitoring Service (CMEMS) website, and then averaged to obtain monthly time series. Details of the AVISO products are available in Boebel and Barron (2003) and Barron et al. (2009).
In addition, the monthly wind data from the fifth generation of European Centre for Medium-range Weather Forecasting (ECMWF) reanalysis (ERA5) with the resolution of 0.25°×0.25° during 1993-2021 was utilized in this study. It was provided by the Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S), and the gridded monthly wind speed vector at 10-meter above the sea surface was used to derive the wind stress curl, which was then used to force the 1.5 layer reduced gravity model. The temperature anomalies in this study were derived from the gridded Argo observations since 2014, detailed descriptions can be referred to Roemmich and Gilson (2009).
Results
Mean structure of the NEC/NEUC
Figure 2 shows the time series of zonal velocity measured by mooring ADCPs along 130°E at different latitudes. By and large, the NEC exists stably between 8°N-18°N during the whole observation period from March 2015 to July 2021, while the NEUC beneath that appears intermittently at most of the latitudes. It is obvious that the intensity of NEC/NEUC is stronger at 8.5°N, 11°N, 12.5°N, compared with that at the other two latitudes, while the depth of the NEC deepens with increasing latitudes. Since the ADCP at 8.5°N well captures the structure and variability of the NEC and NEUC, we described the ADCP measurements at this site as an example (Figure 2E). The energetic westward-flowing NEC at this latitude is located in the upper 200 m, with the strongest current appearing in December 2017 and March 2021, with the velocity reaching -0.25 m/s at the depth of 70 m and -0.22 m/s at the depth of 90 m, respectively. Below 200 m, there appears to be an intermittent eastward-flowing NEUC, which seems to be associated with interannual events. It is strong during the period of March 2016-April 2017 and June 2019-June 2020 with the maximum velocity of 0.14 m/s at 430 m and 0.10 m/s at 400 m, when the overlying NEC is weak and shallow. During April 2017-November 2018 and October 2020-July 2021, the NEUC becomes weak, while the NEC strengthens and deepens. Notably, an obvious eastward flow appears in the upper 200 m during March-August 2015 at 17.5°N (Figure 2A), which is probably related to the Subtropical Countercurrent (STCC). STCC is a surface-trapped eastward flow in the upper 200 m with multiple branches between 17°N and 25°N (e.g., Yoshida and Kidokoro, 1967; Kobashi et al., 2006). Based on ADCP records along 135°E and satellite altimetry, a recent study demonstrated that the southern STCC is profoundly intensified by the mesoscale/sub-mesoscale eddy activities in El Niño (Azminuddin et al., 2019). Therefore, the northern part of the NEC could also be affected by meridional fluctuations of the STCC.
Figure 2 Time series of zonal velocity (m/s) measured by the mooring ADCPs at (A) 17.5°N, (B) 15°N, (C) 12.5°N, (D) 11°N and (E) 8.5°N along 130°E. All the time series have been smoothed with a 1-year low-pass filter.
In order to examine the mean velocity structure of the NEC/NEUC along the 130°E section, the temporally mean zonal current derived from moorings at different latitudes is shown in Figure 3. It is obvious that the main body of the NEC is concentrated above the isopycnal of 26.8 σθ, and therefore 26.8 σθ is considered as the bottom boundary of the NEC in this study. The velocity core of the NEC is located in the upper 100 m south of 12.5°N with a maximum of -0.24 m/s, and it deepens to 200 m with increasing latitudes. Below 26.8 σθ, two pronounced NEUC jets appear at ~8.5°N and ~12.5°N with a zonal velocity of 0.042 m/s and 0.024 m/s, respectively. An eastward flow with a velocity of 0.017 m/s is also observed below the depth of 600 m at ~17.5°N. Qiu et al. (2013b) and Wang et al. (2015) suggested that the northern branch of the NEUC is located around 18°N based on Argo and CTD data. Therefore, the eastward flow below 600 m at 17.5°N is believed to be associated with the northern NEUC jet, and the ADCP captures the upper part of the jet. Furthermore, the NEUC at 8.5°N seems stronger than that at the other two latitudes. The depth of NEUC jet is below 200 m at 8.5°N, which deepens gradually and reaches 600 m at 17.5°N. These results are generally consistent with the mean velocity structure derived from Argo floats and CTD measurements by previous studies in terms of the position and strength of the currents (e.g., Qiu et al., 2013b; Wang et al., 2015). The mean volume transports of the NEC and NEUC estimated from the ADCP measurements are -30.4 Sv and 5.1 Sv, respectively. Here, the NEC transport was defined as the integral of negative velocities from surface to 26.8 σθ between 8.5°-17.5°N, and the NEUC transport was calculated by integrating positive velocities from 26.8 σθ to 900 m between 8.5°-17.5°N. Based on multiple glider transects along 134.3°E between 8.5°-16.5°N, the mean NEC transport from the surface to 27.3 σθ is around -37.6 Sv with a standard deviation of 15.6 Sv (Schönau and Rudnick, 2015), and the ADCP-derived NEC transport generally agrees with the glider observations.
Figure 3 Mean zonal velocity (color, m/s) along 130°E section derived from all the mooring ADCP measurements during 2014-2021. Black curves denote potential density surfaces derived from WOA18.
Interannual variation of NEC/NEUC
Seven years of ADCP measurements enable us to explore the interannual variability of the NEC/NEUC. Figure 4 shows the time series of zonal velocity anomalies derived from mooring ADCP records at different latitudes. Significant variations of the currents could be noticed on interannual time scale. Interestingly, the zonal velocity in the upper 900 m at 8.5°N and 17.5°N exhibits prominent vertically synchronous fluctuations. For example, positive velocity anomalies appear in both the surface and subsurface layers from March 2016 to March 2017 and from April 2019 to July 2020 at 8.5°N, which turns into negative anomalies simultaneously from April 2017 to October 2018 and from October 2020 to July 2021 (Figure 4E). The vertically synchronous fluctuations also exist at 17.5°N (Figure 4A). Such vertically synchronous fluctuations in the upper 900 m imply that the eastward NEUC is strong when the overlying westward NEC is weak. This phenomenon coincides well with recent repeated glider observations by Schönau and Rudnick (2015). They suggested that persistent eastward undercurrents affected the transport variability of the NEC, with the NEC being weaker when there was a stronger NEUC. Therefore, their vertically synchronous fluctuations might be controlled by the same mechanism. Notably, the currents exhibit subsurface-intensified interannual features at 8.5°N with the strongest signal appearing between 300-500 m, and the signal is surface-intensified at 17.5°N, indicating different oceanic processes occur between these two latitudes. In addition, the interannual variation of the currents in the upper 900 m between 11°N and 15°N is not always vertically synchronous over the observation period (Figures 4B–D), implying the multimodal vertical structure of the interannual signal at these latitudes, which will be investigated in section 3.4.
Figure 4 Time series of zonal velocity anomalies (m/s) derived from mooring ADCP measurements at (A) 17.5°N, (B) 15°N, (C) 12.5°N, (D) 11°N, and (E) 8.5°N along 130°E. All the time series have been smoothed with a 1-year low-pass filter.
In addition, there seems to be a meridional phase lag between the zonal velocity anomalies at different latitudes on interannual time scale, with the signal at higher latitudes lagging that at lower latitudes (Figure 4). For example, positive velocity anomalies shift to negative velocity anomalies that appears in March 2017 at 8.5°N, in June 2017 at 11°N, in February 2018 at 12.5°N, and in April 2018 at 15°N (Figures 4B–E). The signal at 15°N lags that at 8.5°N by about one year. To further examine the reliability of this meridional phase lag phenomenon, the lagging time was quantified by performing a lead-lag analysis to the time series of velocities averaged in the upper 200 m between every two adjacent sites from 8.5°N to 15°N. The results suggest that the interannual signal at 11°N lags that at 8.5°N by 3 months with a correlation of 0.81, the signal at 12.5°N lags that at 11°N by 8 months with a correlation of 0.77, and the signal at 15°N lags that at 12.5°N by 4 months with a correlation of 0.52. All of the correlations are significant at the 95% confidence level. Therefore, the phase lag of the zonal velocity at different latitudes is reliable. Recent study based on the same ADCP datasets along 130°E and satellite altimetry demonstrated a similar phase lag feature on seasonal time scale except for a slight phase advance from 8°N to 13°N (Wang et al., 2019). The propagation speed change of Rossby wave with latitudes plays a key role in explaining the phase lag feature, and the slight phase advance was attributed to the Asian monsoon (Wang et al., 2019). The difference of lead-lag relations on different time scales implies that the mechanism of the phase lag on interannual time scale might be different, which will be explored in the following analysis.
Considering the significant fluctuations of the velocity in the upper ocean observed by the ADCP measurements, the interannual variation of the currents should be captured well by the satellite altimetry. We firstly compared the altimeter-derived zonal currents with the mooring ADCP measurements, and the two time series agreed well with each other (Figure 5). The correlation between them is 0.74, 0.71, 0.96, 0.77, and 0.97 at 8.5°N, 11°N, 12.5°N, 15°N and 17.5°N, respectively, all of which are above the 95% confidence level. The high correlation indicates that the interannual variability of the currents detected by mooring ADCPs is well reflected by the satellite altimetry. Moreover, the meridional phase lag characteristics of the zonal velocity time series with latitudes are also well captured by the satellite altimetry. The large scale coverage of satellite observations enables us to further investigate the interannual variation of the currents in this region.
Figure 5 Vertically averaged zonal velocity (m/s) between 50-100 m derived from mooring ADCP measurements (red) at (A) 17.5°N, (B) 15°N, (C) 12.5°N, (D) 11°N and (E) 8.5°N during 2014-2021, compared with the zonal geostrophic velocity (m/s) at the same locations derived from satellite altimetry (blue). All the time series have been smoothed with a 1-year low-pass filter.
Figures 6A, C show the Sea Surface Height Anomalies (SSHA) and corresponding zonal geostrophic velocity anomalies at 130°E between 8°-18°N derived from satellite altimetry (2014-2018). The time series were moving-averaged in every 3° latitude band to avoid the influence of mesoscale features. Obviously, there are phase-lagged signals in the velocity with increasing latitudes. A positive velocity signal appears in July 2016 at 8.5°N, and then appears in November 2017 at 15°N, which is consistent with the results in Figures 4–5. The associated SSHA signals also exhibit pronounced phase-lagged features with latitudes (Figure 6A). The meridional gradient of this phase-lagged SSHA explains the delayed signal in the velocity anomalies shown in Figure 6C, and the reason for the phase-lagged SSHA will be given in the next section.
Figure 6 Time-latitude diagrams of the SSHA (a, m) and zonal geostrophic velocity anomalies (c, m/s) at 130°E derived from AVISO products. (B) and (D) are same as (A) and (C), but from reduced gravity model simulations.
Mechanism of the meridional phase lag
Interannual variations of SSHA in the western Pacific have been investigated in many previous studies, which were attributed to the basin-scale wind stress curl forcing. SSHA signals are induced by anomalous wind stress curl forcing in the central Pacific through Ekman convergence or divergence process, and then propagate westward in the form of baroclinic Rossby wave and modulate the SSH in the western Pacific (e.g., Qiu and Joyce, 1992; Qiu and Lukas, 1996; Qu et al., 1998; Kim et al., 2004; Kashino et al., 2009). Considering the different phase speed of the baroclinic Rossby wave at different latitudes, similar Rossby wave signals at low latitudes arrive to the western Pacific earlier than that at high latitudes due to its faster propagation speed, which may explain the meridional phase lag of velocity variations at different latitudes. We plotted the time-longitude diagrams of SSHA at 8.5°N, 12°N and 15°N during 2014-2018 in Figure 7. Obvious westward propagating signals could be noticed at all the latitudes, and positive/negative SSHA signals are induced by anomalous wind stress curl in the central Pacific, which arrive to the western Pacific earlier at 8.5°N than that at 15°N, reflecting the faster phase speed of the baroclinic Rossby wave at lower latitudes.
Figure 7 Hovmöller diagrams of the SSHA (m) along (A) 8.5°N, (B) 12°N, and (C) 15°N from AVISO products during January 2014 and December 2018.
To further investigate the effects of different baroclinic Rossby wave propagation speeds at different latitudes on the meridional phase lag of SSHA, we considered a linear wind-driven first-mode baroclinic Rossby wave model with zero background flow (e.g., Meyer, 1979; Kessler, 1990; Hsin and Qiu, 2012). Qiu and Chen (2006) pointed out that the east boundary forcing was important for capturing the observed SSHA at low latitudes, especially during strong ENSO events. Therefore, besides the wind stress curl forcing, the eastern boundary forcing is also included in the model, and the SSHA is estimated as follows,
, ) denotes the modeled SSHA, and is for the observed monthly SSHA near the Pacific eastern boundary (Fu and Qiu, 2002). CR is the phase speed of the first-mode baroclinic Rossby wave. is the wind stress vector, which is derived from the wind data of ERA5. g and ρ0 are the gravity constant and background potential density of 9.807 m/s2 and 1025 kg/m3, respectively. g’ is the reduced gravity. ε is the Newtonian dissipation rate, and εB is the Newtonian dissipation rate associated with the boundary-forced signals. The selection principle of g’, ε and εB is to make sure the difference between model results and observations reaches the minimum. For the baroclinic Rossby wave speed CR, the value estimated by Chelton et al. (1998) based on the global climatological atlas of first-mode baroclinic gravity wave was used, which was further modified with a latitude-dependent amplification factor , to make the estimated CR closer to the satellite altimeter observations, as suggested by Qiu and Chen (2006).
The simulated-SSHA and corresponding geostrophic velocity are shown in Figures 6B, D, respectively. The simulated-SSHA also displays meridional phase lag signals between 8°-16°N (Figure 6B), which is generally consistent with the satellite altimetry results (Figure 6A). The slight discrepancy between the observed and simulated SSHA could be related to energetic mesoscale eddy activities in this region. Mooring observations at 130°E revealed significant intraseasonal variations and active eddy activities (Zhang et al., 2017a), and mesoscale eddies could modulate the SSH variations through eddy momentum flux forcing (Qiu et al., 2015a). However, the reduced gravity model used here only captures the wind-driven SSH signals and misses the eddy-driven parts, which probably explains the difference between the observed and simulated SSHA (Figures 6A, B). In terms of the simulated velocity anomalies, the meridional phase lag signal with latitudes is obvious (Figure 6D). This result coincides well with the lag time demonstrated by the ADCP observations and satellite altimetry products. Above consistency between the model results and observations confirms that the interannual variation of the currents and SSHA at 130°E in the western Pacific is primarily determined by the wind stress curl variation through westward propagation of Rossby wave, and the different phase speed of the baroclinic Rossby wave at different latitudes accounts for the meridional phase lag of SSHA and associated geostrophic currents observed at the fixed longitude of 130°E.
To distinguish the contribution of wind forcing in different longitude bands, several wind-shield sensitivity experiments were performed with the 1.5 layer reduce-gravity model, which was forced by wind stress curl in the western (120°E-150°E), central (150°E-160°W) and eastern (160°W-110°W) Pacific, independently. The effect of eastern boundary forcing was also investigated with the model. The wind-shield sensitivity experiments at 8.5°N were displayed as an example (Figures 8A–F), and the time series of SSHA at 130°E derived from these experiments were shown in Figure 8G. The relative contribution of each regional wind forcing was further estimated as the standard deviation of the simulated time series divided by the sum of all the standard deviations. The results show that the wind forcing in the western, central, eastern Pacific, and the eastern boundary forcing explains 22.2%, 58.7%, 16.6% and 2.6% of the total interannual variations of the currents at 130°E, respectively. In addition, the wind-shield sensitivity experiments were also performed at 12.5°N and 15°N. The wind forcing in the western, central, eastern Pacific, and the eastern boundary forcing explains 20.4%, 56.8%, 17% and 5.8% of the total variance at 12.5°N, and explains 22.1%, 49.7%, 22.3% and 7.8% of the total variance at 15°N, respectively. Generally speaking, the wind forcing in the central Pacific plays a dominant role in the NEC variation at 130°E, and the wind forcing in the western and eastern Pacific also show substantial contributions, while the effect of eastern boundary forcing is limited.
Figure 8 Hovmöller diagrams of SSHA (m) at 8.5°N derived from (A) altimeter observation and (B–F) model experiments with period longer than a year. (B) is forced by the wind stress curl from 130°E to 90°W and eastern boundary forcing. (C–E) are only forced by the wind stress curl between 130°-150°E, 150°E-160°W, and 160°-90°W, respectively. (F) is run with the eastern boundary forcing. (G) displays the time series of SSHA at 8.5°N, 130°E derived from above model experiments.
Mechanism of vertical variations
Mooring ADCP records reveal that the NEC/NEUC at 130°E exhibits pronounced vertical variations in the upper 900 m on interannual time scale. To investigate the vertical structure of this interannual variation, we calculated the empirical orthogonal function (EOF) mode of the velocity time series at different latitudes, and the pattern of the first EOF mode was shown in Figure 9. For zonal velocities at all the five mooring sites, the first EOF mode captures most part of the total velocity variance, which explains 93.3%, 45%, 86.5%, 73.6% and 96.4% of the total variance at 8.5°N, 11°N, 12.5°N, 15°N and 17.5°N, respectively. Obviously, the first EOF mode of the currents at 8.5°N seems intensified below the thermocline with the strongest signal appearing between 300-500 m. This subsurface-intensified signal also exists at 11°N, and gradually turns into a surface-intensified signal with increasing latitudes.
Figure 9 First EOF mode of the zonal velocity (m/s) time series at (A) 8.5°N, (B) 11°N, (C) 12.5°N, (D) 15°N, and (E) 17.5°N from mooring ADCP records in the upper 900 m (red) and ADCP-CM records in the upper 4000 m (blue).
Furthermore, we conducted EOF analysis to the time series of zonal velocity over the full depth by combining the ADCP measurements in the upper 900 m with the CM records between 1000-4000 m at 8.5°N, 11°N and 15°N (Figures 9A, B, D). The first EOF mode still plays a dominant role in the total velocity variations, which accounts for 86.7%, 48.1% and 65.3% of the total variance at 8.5°N, 11°N and 15°N, respectively. Both the surface-intensified signal at 15°N and subsurface-intensified signal at 8.5°N, 11°N are reflected in the first EOF mode over the full-depth, which coincides well with the EOF analysis in the upper 900 m mentioned above.
In fact, oceanic response to the wind forcing could be represented by the combination of signals with different vertical modes (e.g., McCreary, 1981; Kessler and McCreary, 1993). To explain the prominent difference of the first EOF mode among 8.5°-17.5°N, the vertical mode decomposition analysis was performed. Figure 10 shows the vertical structure of the barotropic mode and first three baroclinic modes at 8.5°N, 11°N, 12.5°N, 15°N and 17.5°N, which was estimated with the climatological mean density profile from the WOA18. Obviously, the first EOF mode at 15°N and 17.5°N show similar vertical structure to the first baroclinic mode, and the first EOF mode at 8.5°N, 11°N, and 12.5°N seem to be dominated by the combination of the first and second baroclinic mode (Figures 9 and 10).
Figure 10 Vertical structure of the barotropic mode and first three baroclinic modes at (A) 8.5°N, (B) 11°N, (C) 12.5°N, (D) 15°N, and (E) 17.5°N along 130°E calculated with the climatological mean density profile from the WOA18.
We further projected the zonal velocity from ADCP and CM observations onto those vertical modes, and obtained the time series for each vertical mode. Considering the vertical mode projection needs the time series of velocity profile within the full-depth, the current meter records at 8.5°N, 11°N and 15°N were used due to their better vertical coverage and temporal continuity. The contribution of each mode was derived through calculating the standard deviation of each time series divided by the sum of all the standard deviations. The contribution of the first three baroclinic modes at each latitude was recorded in Table 2. Notably, the variance contribution of the first and second baroclinic mode reaches 45.38% and 13.81% at 15°N, demonstrating the dominance of the first baroclinic mode and accounting for the surface-intensified interannual variation of the NEC/NEUC velocity at this latitude (Figure 9D). While the contribution of the first baroclinic mode is comparable to that of the second baroclinic mode at the southern part, which reaches 32.99% and 29.9% at 8.5°N, and 32.76% and 23.59% at 11°N. It indicates that the second baroclinic mode substantially modulates the interannual variation of the currents, accounting for the subsurface-intensified characteristics of the interannual variation as revealed by the first EOF mode (Figures 9A, B).
In general, above analysis indicates that interannual variations of the NEC/NEUC velocity along 130°E between 8°-18°N are primarily dominated by surface-intensified signals with a vertical structure of the first baroclinic mode, while that in the southern part (8.5°N and 11°N) is also modulated by the second baroclinic mode, exhibiting subsurface-intensified features. We reconstructed the time series of velocity profile at 15°N with the first baroclinic mode and corresponding time series, and that at 8.5°N and 11°N with the first two baroclinic modes and their time series (Figure 11). The reconstructed time series at 8.5°N, 11°N and 15°N exhibit features consistent with the original time series from the moorings in Figure 4, further demonstrating the dominant role of these baroclinic modes in the interannual variation of the currents.
Figure 11 Reconstructed zonal velocity (m/s) time series in the upper 900 m during 2015-2021 with the first baroclinic mode at (A) 15°N, with (B) and (C) the first two baroclinic modes at 11°N, and 8.5°N.
Previous studies have investigated the excitation of different baroclinic vertical modes in response to wind stress forcing. Iskandar et al. (2006) adopted the wind stress coupling coefficient to examine the efficiency of the wind stress in exciting the vertical modes in the Indian Ocean, and concluded that the first mode was more favorably excited in thicker and milder thermocline regions, while the second mode was more efficiently excited in thinner and sharper thermocline regions. In this study, the basic density stratification along 130°E from 8°N to 18°N varies with latitudes. Hydrographic observations at 130°E indicated that the thermocline was thinner/sharper at 8.5°N, and thicker/milder at 15°N (Wang et al., 2015). Therefore, it is reasonable to hypothesize that the first baroclinic mode is excited more favorably at 15°N, while the second baroclinic mode is excited more favorably at 8.5°N, which to some extent explains the different vertical structure of the interannual variation observed by mooring ADCPs at different latitudes.
Relationship with ENSO
Interannual variations of the NEC are generally modulated by ENSO events (e.g., Qiu and Joyce, 1992; Qiu and Lukas, 1996), while the relationship between NEUC and ENSO events is not clear yet. Thus, this section attempts to discuss the relationship of NEUC with ENSO based on mooring observations. In fact, the mooring array used in this study well covers the NEC, but it seems insufficient to capture the NEUC branches due to their narrow width and active meridional shifts. Also, there are lots of gaps in the ADCP data due to instrument failure (Figure 2). These factors make it difficult to resolve the interannual variability of the multiple NEUC jets. Nevertheless, the ADCP data at 8.5°N is relatively continuous, and the jet appears stable, so this site is taken as an example to analyze the variability of the NEC/NEUC. Figure 12 displays the time series of NEC velocity vertically averaged between 50-150 m and NEUC velocity between 300-800 m derived from ADCP measurements at 8.5°N. The result indicates that the NEC variation is tightly correlated with Niño 3.4 index, which is weak during El Niño and strong during La Niña, considering that NEC is a westward flow. Previous studies demonstrated that the NEC migrated northward during El Niño and shifted to the south during La Niña (e.g., Qiu and Lukas, 1996; Kim et al., 2004; Qiu and Chen, 2010), which might be responsible for the interannual variation of NEC observed by ADCP at 8.5°N. Furthermore, the interannual variation of the NEUC branch at 8.5°N displays different features compared with that of the NEC, and it is intensified during the mature phase of El Niño and reaches the maximum velocity during the decay phase (Figure 12). When the NEUC velocity lags Niño3.4 index by 6 months, their correlation reaches maximum of 0.89, significantly above the 95% confidence level.
Figure 12 The normalized zonal velocity time series of NEC (blue) and NEUC (red) at 8.5°N derived from mooring measurements during 2016-2021. Shading denotes the Niño3.4 index. Here the normalized NEC velocity is defined as the mean zonal velocity averaged between 50-150 m, which is scaled by its standard deviation. The definition of normalized NEUC is same as the NEC but for the depth range of 300-800 m. All curves are smoothed with a 1-year low-pass filter.
To further demonstrate their interannual variations, the Hovmöller diagram of temperature anomalies in the NEC/NEUC layer (0-150/300-800 dbar) at 8.5°N was examined with Argo data (Figure 13). The temperature phases in the upper ocean are basically consistent with the interannual variation of the NEC (Figures 12 and 13A): cooling during the weakened phase of NEC (July 2014-July 2016 and July 2018-September 2019), and warming during the intensified phase of NEC (January 2017-April 2018 and January 2020-June 2021). For the NEUC layer, the temperature anomalies are relatively weaker but the pattern is similar to that in the NEC layer (Figure 13B). Westward propagating signals are noticeable in both the NEC and NEUC layer, indicating that the interannual variation of both the NEC and NEUC is influenced by the remote wind forcing through Rossby waves. Nevertheless, the positive temperature anomalies in the NEUC layer west of 150°E during August 2016-March 2018 and April 2020-April 2021 exhibit features generated locally (Figure 13B), implying that the interannual variability of the NEUC is probably also modulated by local factors besides the remote wind forcing.
Figure 13 Hovmöller diagram of the temperature anomaly (°C) averaged between (A) 0-150 dbar and (B) 300-800 dbar at 8.5°N derived from Argo during 2014-2021. Note that the colorbar scale is different in (A) and (B).
Conclusion and discussion
Based on mooring observations along 130°E between 8°-18°N in the northwestern Pacific during 2014-2021, combining with AVISO products, the interannual variability of the NEC and NEUC was investigated. Seven years of mooring ADCP measurements in the upper 900 m indicate prominent interannual variations of the NEC and NEUC, with the interannual signal in the north lagging that in the south. Satellite altimetry also demonstrates consistent phase-lagged features with increasing latitudes. Utilizing a 1.5-layer reduced gravity model, interannual variations of the SSH and associated currents in this area were simulated. It is suggested that the meridional phase lag of velocity at different latitudes on the interannual time scale is related to the different propagating speed of baroclinic Rossby wave, which propagates faster at lower latitudes and slower at higher latitudes. Further model sensitivity experiments suggest that the wind forcing in the central Pacific plays a dominant role in the SSHA variation at 130°E, while the effects of wind forcing in the western and eastern Pacific are not ignorable.
EOF and vertical mode decomposition analysis indicate that interannual variation of the NEC/NEUC velocity structure at 130°E is mostly dominated by the first baroclinic mode with a surface-intensified structure. At 8.5°N and 11°N, the second baroclinic mode also modulates the interannual variation of the currents substantially, and the contribution is comparable to the first baroclinic mode, inducing the subsurface-intensified vertical structure of the interannual signal at these latitudes. The excitation of different baroclinic modes at different latitudes is probably related to the stratification change crossing the NEC/NEUC along 130°E.
The NEUC exhibits pronounced relationship with ENSO. Mooring measurements at 8.5°N indicates that the NEUC branch is intensified during the mature phase of El Niño, and reaches the maximum velocity during the decay phase. Its correlation with Niño 3.4 index reaches 0.89 when the NEUC lags by 6 months, and both the locally generated and westward propagating signals are important for the interannual modulation of NEUC at 130°E.
Previous studies associated the zonal velocity and temperature variations below the equatorial thermocline with vertically propagating equatorial Rossby waves (e.g., Kessler and McCreary, 1993; Marin et al., 2010; Ishizaki et al., 2014; Ma et al., 2020). Yang et al. (2020) utilized the linear continuously stratified model to investigate the oceanic response with different vertical modes and concluded that the seasonal variability of the subsurface currents in the northwestern tropical Pacific was more correlated to the vertical propagation of off-equatorial Rossby waves associated with low-order baroclinic modes in the stratified ocean than that of the equatorial Rossby waves. Statistical analysis (EOF and vertical mode decomposition) in this study indicates that interannual variations of the NEC/NEUC reflect the low-order mode baroclinic response of the ocean to wind forcing, but it is ambiguous what role the vertical propagation of off-equatorial Rossby waves plays in that process on interannual time scale. Therefore, a linear continuously stratified model will be employed in future works to examine the interannual variability of NEC/NEUC and its relationship with the vertical propagation of off-equatorial Rossby waves.
Data availability statement
The original contributions presented in the study are included in the article/Supplementary Material. Further inquiries can be directed to the corresponding author.
Author contributions
YH performed the data analysis and wrote the initial draft. LZ proposed the main ideas, took part in the data analysis, and dramatically modified the manuscript. FJW, FW, and DH all participated in the discussion and contributed to the improvement of the manuscript. All authors contributed to the article and approved the submitted version.
Funding
This study was funded by the Strategic Priority Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (No. XDB42010105), the National Key Research and Development Program of China (No. 2020YFA0608801), the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant No. 42122041), and the National Key Research and Development Program of China (No. 2017YFA0603202). The Youth Innovation Promotion Association (CAS) and the TS Scholar Program also supported this study. Mooring data were collected onboard of R/V KeXue implementing the open research cruises NORC2019-09 and NORC2021-09 supported by the NSFC Shiptime Sharing Projects (Grant No. 41849909 and 42049909) and QNLM shipboard observation cruise (Grant No. 2022QNLM010103).
Acknowledgments
We express our sincere gratitude to the crew of R/V Science, including all scientists and technicians on board for deployment and retrieval of subsurface moorings. This study was also benefited from the freely available datasets: satellite altimetry dataset (https://resources.marine.copernicus.eu/product-download/SEALEVEL_GLO_PHY_L4_MY_008_047), ERA5 wind dataset (https://cds.climate.copernicus.eu/cdsapp#!/dataset/reanalysis-era5-single-levels-monthly-means?tzab=form), Argo dataset (http://sio-argo.ucsd.edu/RG_Climatology.html), and WOA18 dataset (https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/access/world-ocean-atlas-2018/).
Conflict of interest
The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.
Publisher’s note
All claims expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of their affiliated organizations, or those of the publisher, the editors and the reviewers. Any product that may be evaluated in this article, or claim that may be made by its manufacturer, is not guaranteed or endorsed by the publisher.
Supplementary Material
The Supplementary Material for this article can be found online at: https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2022.979442/full#supplementary-material
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Keywords: North Equatorial Current, North Equatorial Undercurrent, interannual variability, Rossby wave, vertical mode
Citation: Huang Y, Zhang L, Wang F, Wang F and Hu D (2022) Interannual variations of the North Equatorial Current/Undercurrent from mooring array observations. Front. Mar. Sci. 9:979442. doi: 10.3389/fmars.2022.979442
Received: 27 June 2022; Accepted: 17 August 2022;
Published: 02 September 2022.
Edited by:
Xueming Zhu, Southern Marine Science and Engineering Guangdong Laboratory (Zhuhai), ChinaReviewed by:
Fuad Azminuddin, Korea Institute of Ocean Science and TechnologySouth KoreaHua Jiang, National Marine Environmental Forecasting Center, China
Copyright © 2022 Huang, Zhang, Wang, Wang and Hu. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
*Correspondence: Linlin Zhang, zhanglinlin@qdio.ac.cn