The time series of temperature data obtained from moored buoys deployed at 8°N, 12°N, and 15°N along 90°E in the Bay of Bengal (BoB) shows a persistent intraseasonal variability on 30-120 day time scale in three distinct periods 30-70 day, near 90 day, and near 120 day in the thermocline region. The standard deviation of moored buoy temperature data shows that half of the variability in the thermocline region is contributed from the 30-120 day variability. The relative contribution of local Ekman pumping velocity and remote wind forcing from equatorial Indian Ocean (EIO) to the intraseasonal thermocline variability in the BoB is examined using satellite-derived sea surface height anomaly (SSHA), wind and depths of 23° isotherm (D23, pr...