AbstractProjections of equatorial sea surface temperature from CMIP5 climate models are important for understanding possible future changes in marine habitats, local rainfall and climate processes such as El Niño Southern Oscillation. Interpreting the projected changes in the tropical Pacific is complicated by the systematic cold tongue bias and overly westward location of the Warm Pool edge at the equator in coupled models. Here an index based on the maximum zonal salinity gradient is used to differentiate the Warm Pool from the cold tongue in each of 19 CMIP5 models. Warming is then calculated relative to the dynamic edge of the Warm Pool between the second halves of the 20th and 21st Centuries from the RCP8.5 scenario to provide a bias a...