International audienceIntraseasonal variability (10-50 days) in the equatorial Atlantic Ocean is analyzed from multiyear (1999-2005) satellite gridded products of sea-level anomalies (SLA) and sea-surface temperature (SST). Two regions with distinct intraseasonal variability have been identified. The first one, west of 10 degrees W, is dominated by westward-propagating anomalies, with maximum values in SLA along 5 degrees N and in SST along 2 degrees N: They occur in boreal summer with periods of 25-50 days and are known to correspond to tropical instability waves (TIWs). We show that TIWs have also a signature, though weaker, south of the equator, especially along 5 degrees S, in SLA. Northern and southern anomalies propagate together west...