Abstract

AbstractThe equatorial Atlantic zonal sea surface temperature (SST) gradient, which has significant climatic and biogeochemical effects, is closely associated with the equatorial Pacific zonal SST gradient through Walker circulation on seasonal and interannual time scales. However, discrepancies in current SST data sets mean that its long‐term trend is not well understood. Here, using multiple data sets, we find a robust weakening long‐term trend (i.e., greater warming in the east than west) in the equatorial Atlantic zonal SST gradient over the period 1900–2010 in all data sets. We also find that this weakening trend is closely linked to the tropical Pacific cold tongue mode (CTM), which corresponds to a strong increasing long‐term trend of zonal SST gradient along the equatorial Pacific (i.e., warming in the west and cooling in the east). Specifically, the long‐term cooling SST anomalies associated with the CTM modify the Walker circulation, and leads to weaker trade winds over the western equatorial Atlantic. These in turn deepen the thermocline in the eastern equatorial Atlantic, and cause the weakening long‐term trend of SST gradient along the equatorial Atlantic. The long‐term trend of the CTM is induced by ocean dynamical feedback in response to global warming, suggesting that global warming could affect the equatorial Atlantic zonal SST gradient via the CTM. Our results provide a novel explanation of the linkages between the long‐term trend of equatorial Atlantic zonal SST gradient and the CTM under global warming, which carries important implications for the relationship between global warming and the equatorial Atlantic zonal SST gradient.

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