Sources, pathways, and drivers of sub-Antarctic Mode Water formation
Sources, pathways, and drivers of sub-Antarctic Mode Water formation
Sub‐Antarctic Mode Waters (SAMWs) form to the north of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current in the Indo‐Pacific Ocean, whence they ventilate the ocean's lower pycnocline and play an important role in the climate system. With a backward Lagrangian particle‐tracking experiment in a data‐assimilative model of the Southern Ocean (B‐SOSE), we address the long‐standing question of the extent to which SAMWs originate from densification of southward‐flowing subtropical waters versus lightening of northward‐flowing Antarctic waters sourced by Circumpolar Deep Water (CDW) upwelling. Our analysis evidences the co‐occurrence ofboth sources in all SAMW formation areas, and strong inter‐basin contrasts in their relative contributions.Subtropical waters are the main precursor of Indian Ocean SAMWs (70%–75% of particles) but contribute a smaller amount (<40% of particles) to Pacific SAMWs, which are mainly sourced from the up welled CDW. By tracking property changes along particle trajectories, we show that SAMW formation from northern and southern sources involves contrasting drivers:subtropical source waters are cooled and densified by surface heat fluxes, and freshened by ocean mixing. Southern source waters are warmed and lightened by surface heat and freshwater fluxes, and they are made either saltier by mixing in the case of Indian SAMWs, or fresher by surface fluxes in the case of Pacific SAMWs. Our results underscore the distinct climatic impact of Indian and Pacific SAMWs formation, involving net release of atmospheric heat and uptake of atmospheric freshwater,respectively; a role that is conferred by the relative contributions of subtropical and Antarctic sources to their formation.
Lagrangian tracking, Southern Ocean, Sub-Antartic Mode Waters, ocean mixing, water mass transformation
Fernández Castro, Bieito
8017e93c-d5ee-4bba-b443-9c72ca512d61
Naveira Garabato, Alberto C.
97c0e923-f076-4b38-b89b-938e11cea7a6
Mazloff, Matthew R.
caeb0ed2-c954-4ac9-b908-ac0557c9e995
Williams, Richard G.
6686109a-abe3-41f7-8636-14cb8daaa6db
18 April 2025
Fernández Castro, Bieito
8017e93c-d5ee-4bba-b443-9c72ca512d61
Naveira Garabato, Alberto C.
97c0e923-f076-4b38-b89b-938e11cea7a6
Mazloff, Matthew R.
caeb0ed2-c954-4ac9-b908-ac0557c9e995
Williams, Richard G.
6686109a-abe3-41f7-8636-14cb8daaa6db
Fernández Castro, Bieito, Naveira Garabato, Alberto C., Mazloff, Matthew R. and Williams, Richard G.
(2025)
Sources, pathways, and drivers of sub-Antarctic Mode Water formation.
AGU Advances, 6 (2), [e2024AV001449].
(doi:10.1029/2024AV001449).
Abstract
Sub‐Antarctic Mode Waters (SAMWs) form to the north of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current in the Indo‐Pacific Ocean, whence they ventilate the ocean's lower pycnocline and play an important role in the climate system. With a backward Lagrangian particle‐tracking experiment in a data‐assimilative model of the Southern Ocean (B‐SOSE), we address the long‐standing question of the extent to which SAMWs originate from densification of southward‐flowing subtropical waters versus lightening of northward‐flowing Antarctic waters sourced by Circumpolar Deep Water (CDW) upwelling. Our analysis evidences the co‐occurrence ofboth sources in all SAMW formation areas, and strong inter‐basin contrasts in their relative contributions.Subtropical waters are the main precursor of Indian Ocean SAMWs (70%–75% of particles) but contribute a smaller amount (<40% of particles) to Pacific SAMWs, which are mainly sourced from the up welled CDW. By tracking property changes along particle trajectories, we show that SAMW formation from northern and southern sources involves contrasting drivers:subtropical source waters are cooled and densified by surface heat fluxes, and freshened by ocean mixing. Southern source waters are warmed and lightened by surface heat and freshwater fluxes, and they are made either saltier by mixing in the case of Indian SAMWs, or fresher by surface fluxes in the case of Pacific SAMWs. Our results underscore the distinct climatic impact of Indian and Pacific SAMWs formation, involving net release of atmospheric heat and uptake of atmospheric freshwater,respectively; a role that is conferred by the relative contributions of subtropical and Antarctic sources to their formation.
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AGU Advances - 2025 - Fernández Castro - Sources Pathways and Drivers of Sub‐Antarctic Mode Water Formation
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Accepted/In Press date: 2 April 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 18 April 2025
Published date: 18 April 2025
Keywords:
Lagrangian tracking, Southern Ocean, Sub-Antartic Mode Waters, ocean mixing, water mass transformation
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Local EPrints ID: 501617
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/501617
PURE UUID: df535cef-8a6e-4738-9f8e-e8a1b53fb184
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Date deposited: 04 Jun 2025 16:54
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:30
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Author:
Matthew R. Mazloff
Author:
Richard G. Williams
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