Pc. Chu et al., SOUTH-CHINA SEA WARM POOL DETECTED IN SPRING FROM THE NAVY MASTER OCEANOGRAPHIC OBSERVATIONAL DATA SET (MOODS), J GEO RES-O, 102(C7), 1997, pp. 15761-15771
A South China Sea warm pool with sea surface temperature (SST) higher
than 29.5 degrees C, recently reported by Chu and Chang [1995a, b] and
Chu et al. [1997], appears in the central South China Sea (west of th
e Luzon Island) in boreal spring, strengthens until the onset of the s
ummer monsoon (mid-May), and then weakens and disappears at the end of
May. The transient features and interannual variabilities of the warm
pool have not yet been studied. Here we use a subset of the U.S. Navy
's Master Oceanographic Observation Data Set (MOODS) to investigate th
e surface thermal features. First, we employed an optimal interpolatio
n scheme to build up a 10-day interval synoptic data set for December
1963 to November 1984 on a 0.5 degrees x 1 degrees grids (finer resolu
tion in zonal direction) from the MOODS SST data. An ensemble mean SST
field (T) was established with a rather weak horizontal gradient (28.
5 degrees C near the Palawan Island to 26 degrees C near the southeast
China coast). Second, we performed a composite analysis to obtain the
averaged SST anomaly field (T) over tilde deviating from the ensemble
mean for the winter and spring seasons (December-May). During Decembe
r-March, (T) over tilde is negative almost everywhere throughout the w
hole South China Sea. In early April, positive (T) over tilde with clo
sed isoline (warm pool) was evident west of Luzon Island. In May, the
central SCS warm anomaly becomes stronger. On May 11-20, the central S
CS warm pool (114 degrees-119 degrees E, 14 degrees-19 degrees N) has
(T) over tilde > 1.8 degrees C. The size of the warm pool is around 20
0,000 km(2). Third, we performed an empirical orthogonal function (EOF
) analysis on the residue data ((T) over cap), deviating from T + (T)
over tilde, for the winter and spring seasons, in order to obtain tran
sient and interannual variations of the SST fields. EOF1 accounts for
35.5% of the variance and resembles the ensemble mean pattern of nearl
y parallel contours with a maximum value in the southeast and a minimu
m value in the northwest. EOF2 accounts for 21.4% of the variance and
is characterized by a warm/cool pool (116 degrees-118 degrees E, 16 de
grees-18 degrees N) west of the Luzon Island. The corresponding princi
pal component (PC2) has strong interannual variability with a maximum
value of 10 on February 11-20, 1965 and a minimum of -12 on March 21-3
1, 1964. This indicates the appearance of either a warm pool with a ma
ximum strength of 1.2 degrees C or a cool pool with a maximum strength
of -1 degrees C. Combination of (T) over tilde and PC2 x EOF2 leads t
o an occurrence of a central SCS warm pool from April to May with a wa
rm anomaly varying between 0.8 degrees and 3 degrees C.