Abstract
Seasonal cycle is the largest source of variability for sea surface
salinity (SSS) and has a significant influence on the upper-ocean
stratification and water-mass formation. The advent of the Argo
profiling floats and L-band passive microwave remote sensing in the past
one and half decade has significantly improved the sampling of seasonal
variations of SSS over the global ocean. Assessing the seasonality of
SSS using these recent measurements is important for understanding its
relationships with freshwater forcing and ocean dynamics as well as for
identifying potential limitations of the SSS observing system. Here we
utilize a suite of SSS products from recent satellite and in-situ
platforms to revisit seasonal variations of SSS under different
freshwater forcing conditions. The result shows that, although the
annual harmonic is the most characteristic feature of the seasonal
cycle, the semiannual harmonic is not negligible, especially in regions
influenced by monsoon and major rivers. The annual and semiannual
harmonics account for 70–80 % and 10–16 % of the total observed
variance respectively, which together drive the SSS seasonality. The
range of seasonal SSS is approximately ±0.05 practical salinity scale
(pss) in the subtropical SSS maximum regions, but greater than ±0.25 pss
in the tropical SSS minimum regions. However, the seasonal variations of
satellite SSS in the 20-40°N latitude range showed erroneous annual and
semiannual phases compared with in situ products, the cause of which
needs further examination.