Abstract

This study finds that the correlation between El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and the activity of mesoscale oceanic eddies in the South China Sea (SCS) changed around 2004. The mesoscale eddy number determined from satellite altimetry observations using a geometry of the velocity vector method was significantly and negatively correlated with the Niño-3.4 index before 2004, but the correlation weakened and became insignificant afterward. Further analyses reveal that the ENSO–eddy relation is controlled by two major wind stress forcing mechanisms: one directly related to ENSO and the other indirectly related to ENSO through its subtropical precursor—the Pacific meridional modes (PMMs). Both mechanisms induce wind stress curl variations over the SCS that link ENSO to SCS eddy activities. While the direct ENSO mechanism always induces a negative ENSO–eddy correlation through the Walker circulation, the indirect mechanism is dominated by the northern PMM (nPMM), resulting in a negative ENSO–eddy correlation before 2004, and by the southern PMM (sPMM) after 2004, resulting in a positive ENSO–eddy correlation. As a result, the direct and indirect mechanisms enhance each other to produce a significant ENSO–eddy relation before 2004, but they cancel each other out, resulting in a weak ENSO–eddy relation afterward. The relative strengths of the northern and southern PMMs are the key to determining the ENSO–eddy relation and may be related to a phase change of the interdecadal Pacific oscillation.

Highlights

  • The South China Sea (SCS) is a semienclosed sea located in the subtropical western Pacific whose upperocean circulation is strongly influenced by surface winds in the region (e.g., Fang et al 1998; Chu et al 1999; Hu et al 2000; Fang et al 2002; Liu et al 2008; Hu and Wang 2016)

  • To further confirm that EOF2 is related to the northern PMM (nPMM) before 2004 (i.e., P1) but to the southern PMM (sPMM) afterward (i.e., P2), we show in Fig. 9 the wind and sea level pressure (SLP) anomaly patterns regressed onto the nPMM and sPMM indices during the two subperiods

  • In this study we have examined the interannual variability in the number of mesoscale eddies in the SCS and its relationship with El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO)

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Summary

FEBRUARY 2019

State Key Laboratory of Marine Environmental Science, College of Ocean and Earth Sciences, Xiamen University, Xiamen, China (Manuscript received 28 March 2018, in final form 8 October 2018)

Introduction
Relationships between ENSO and SCS mesoscale eddies
Influences of the IPO on the recent ENSO–eddy relation changes
Findings
Summary and discussion
Full Text
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