Abstract

Abstract A consistent analysis of natural variability and secular trend in Pacific SSTs in the twentieth century is presented. By focusing on spatial and temporal recurrence, but without imposition of periodicity constraints, this single analysis discriminates between biennial, ENSO, and decadal variabilities, leading to refined evolutionary descriptions, and between these natural variability modes and secular trend, all without advance filtering (and potential aliasing) of the SST record. SST anomalies of all four seasons are analyzed together using the extended-EOF technique. Canonical ENSO variability is encapsulated in two modes that depict the growth (east-to-west along the equator) and decay (near-simultaneous amplitude loss across the basin) phases. Another interannual mode, energetic in recent decades, is shown linked to the west-to-east SST development seen in post–climate shift ENSOs: the noncanonical ENSO mode. The mode is closely related to Chiang and Vimont’s meridional mode, and leads to some reduction in canonical ENSO’s oscillatory tendency. Pacific decadal variability is characterized by two modes: the Pan-Pacific mode has a horseshoe structure with the closed end skirting the North American coast, and a quiescent eastern equatorial Pacific. The mode exhibits surprising connections to the tropical/subtropical Atlantic, with correlations there resembling the Atlantic multidecadal oscillation. The second decadal mode—the North Pacific mode—captures the 1976/77 climate shift and is closer to Mantua’s Pacific decadal oscillation. This analysis shows, perhaps for the first time, the striking links of the North Pacific mode to the western tropical Pacific and Indian Ocean SSTs. The physicality of both modes is assessed from correlations with the Pacific biological time series. Finally, the secular trend is characterized: implicit accommodation of natural variability leads to a nonstationary SST trend, including midcentury cooling. The SST trend is remarkably similar to the global surface air temperature trend. Geographically, a sliver of cooling is found in the central equatorial Pacific in the midst of widespread but nonuniform warming in all basins. An extensive suite of sensitivity tests, including counts of the number of observational analogs of the modes in test analyses, supports the robustness of this analysis.

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