“…From the above studies, it is evidenced that the MLT winds are significantly modulated by the solar forcing and lower atmospheric perturbations. Most of the studies on long-term tendencies in the MLT winds are from equatorial/low-latitudes (Burrage et al, 1996;Gurubaran & Rajaram, 1999;Kishore Kumar et al, 2014;Rajaram & Gurubaran, 1998;Sridharan et al, 2007Sridharan et al, , 2010Venkateswara Rao et al, 2012) along with short-term variabilities (K. K. Kumar et al, 2007Kumar et al, , 2008Rao et al, 2014), and mid-latitudes (Jacobi, 2012;Jacobi et al, 2005Jacobi et al, , 2012Jacobi et al, , 2015Namboothiri et al, 1993Namboothiri et al, , 1994Portnyagin et al, 2006); however the trends and variabilities in the high-latitude (including Arctic and Antarctic) MLT winds are very limited (Baumgaertner et al, 2005;Dempsey et al, 2021;Dutta & Sridharan, 2023;Hindley et al, 2022;Jaen et al, 2023;Lukianova et al, 2015Lukianova et al, , 2018Mitchell et al, 2002;Venkateswara Rao et al, 2015) from various observations and model simulations. Global variabilities in the MLT winds can be found at Ramesh et al (2020a), X.…”