Temporal changes in biological and isotopic tracers have successfully been used to monitor monsoon variability in the Arabian Sea. Convincing evidence that fertility indicators, such as the relative abundance of the planktic foraminifer Globigerina bulloides, and SiO2 and Ba fluxes, can monitor monsoon changes, has also been published. Time series of the 13C content of the thermocline foraminifer Neogloboquadrina dutertrei, and of an Upwelling Radiolarian Index (URI), have been used to reconstruct upwelling changes in the Somali Basin at 5 °N for the last 160 kyr. In order to establish a reference site for comparison with other upwelling and/or fertility records from the same area, a time series of 8 climatic and fertility proxies (13C content of N. dutertrei and Globorotalia menardii, percentages of G. bulloides and of a thermocline foraminiferal group, minimal δ18 values of Globigerinoides sacculifer, N. dutertrei and G. menardii) are investigated in the spectral domain for the last 360 kyr, at a site located at the equator and outside the Somali upwelling centers (Core MD 85668).Chronostratigraphies for these records are developed by correlation of oxygen isotope record of G. sacculifer to the Martinson standard stacked benthic oxygen isotope record. The temporal resolution of the data, is between 2 and 5 kyr.Cross spectral comparisons with ETP (Eccentricity + Tilt + Precession-composite signal) were used to estimate coherences in conjunction with phase relationships and to quantify relationships between fertility and climatic indicators. The timing of fertility indicator cycles at the equator shows little (obliquity band) or no (other orbital bands) coincidence with monsoon proxies of the Arabian Sea. At the equator, fertility responses are dissociated, and present important leads or lags with ETP signal at the three orbital bands (with the exception of the thermocline foraminifera, in phase with maximum eccentricity). Due to significant leads with ETP in the timing of 13C minima and URI cycles, no relationships with the Northern Hemisphere radiation can be deduced. At the obliquity and precessional frequency bands, thermocline foraminifera cycles display significant lag with ETP and ice volume minima, which suggests that radiation is not the sole forcing mechanism. Global climatic and ice volume changes may be an important forcing mechanism for these fertility proxies. The G. bulloides record is more complicated with cycles in phase with Arabian Sea monsoon proxies at the obliquity band, and 18O minima at the precession frequency.It appears that, at the equator, the southwest monsoon winds are not the main force driving radiolarian and foraminiferal productivity.