Abstract: 
This study explores the influence of phytoplankton on the tropical Pacific heat budget. A hybrid coupled
model for the tropical Pacific that is based on a primitive equation reduced-gravity multilayer ocean model,
a dynamic ocean mixed layer, an atmospheric mixed layer, and a statistical atmosphere is used. The
statistical atmosphere relates deviations of the sea surface temperature from its mean to wind stress
anomalies and allows for the rectification of the annual cycle and the El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO)
phenomenon through the positive Bjerknes feedback. Furthermore, a nine-component ecosystem model is
coupled to the physical variables of the ocean. The simulated chlorophyll concentrations can feed back onto
the ocean heat budget by their optical properties, which modify solar light absorption in the surface layers.
It is shown that both the surface layer concentration as well as the vertical profile of chlorophyll have a
significant effect on the simulated mean state, the tropical annual cycle, and ENSO. This study supports a
previously suggested hypothesis (Timmermann and Jin) that predicts an influence of phytoplankton con-
centration of the tropical Pacific climate mean state and its variability. The bioclimate feedback diagnosed
here works as follows: Maxima in the subsurface chlorophyll concentrations lead to an enhanced subsurface
warming due to the absorption of photosynthetically available shortwave radiation. This warming triggers
a deepening of the mixed layer in the eastern equatorial Pacific and eventually a reduction of the surface
ocean currents (Murtugudde et al.). The weakened south-equatorial current generates an eastern Pacific
surface warming, which is strongly enhanced by the Bjerknes feedback. Because of the deepening of the
mixed layer, the strength of the simulated annual cycle is also diminished. This in turn leads to an increase
in ENSO variability.