Tropical Pacific Drifting Buoys
Rick Lumpkin / Mayra Pazos, AOML, Miami
MAY 2016
During May 2016, 350 satellite-tracked surface drifting buoys, 45% with
subsurface drogues attached for measuring mixed layer currents, were reporting
from the tropical Pacific. As seen in April, across much of the basin, a
number of drifters indicated westward anomalies of 30-50 cm/s on and near the
equator. Elsewhere, large-scale currents were close to their climatological
May values.

FIGURE A1.1
a) Top: Movements of drifting buoys in the tropical Pacific Ocean.
The linear segments of each trajectory represent a one week displacement.
Trajectories of buoys which have lost their subsurface drogues are gray; those with
drogues are blue.
b) Middle: Monthly mean currents calculated from all buoys 1993-2010 (gray),
and currents measured by the drogued buoys this month (black) smoothed by an
optimal filter.
c) Bottom: Anomalies from the climatological monthly mean currents for this month.
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