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Enhanced warming of the subtropical mode water in the North Pacific and North Atlantic
Sugimoto, S.; Hanawa, K.; Watanabe, T.; Suga, T.; Xie, S.-P. (2017). Enhanced warming of the subtropical mode water in the North Pacific and North Atlantic. Nat. Clim. Chang. 7(9): 656-658. https://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nclimate3371
In: Nature Climate Change. Nature Publishing Group: London. ISSN 1758-678X; e-ISSN 1758-6798, more
Peer reviewed article  

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  • Sugimoto, S.
  • Hanawa, K.
  • Watanabe, T.
  • Suga, T.
  • Xie, S.-P.

Abstract
    Over the past six decades, the subtropical surface ocean has warmed at rates close to those of global mean surface ocean temperature except in western boundary current regions where the surface warming is locally enhanced by a factor of two. Changes in the subsurface ocean, however, remain unclear because of lack of data. Compiling historical temperature measurements—some available for the first time—here we show that the subtropical mode water has warmed over the past six decades in both the North Pacific and North Atlantic. The rate of the warming is twice as large in the mode waters than at the surface. Subtropical mode waters are important water masses of vertically uniform temperature that are a few hundred metres thick and distributed widely in the main thermocline of the subtropical oceans. The enhanced warming of subtropical mode waters can be traced back to the surface warming in the formation regions along the western boundary current extensions. Furthermore, we detect increased temperature stratification and decreased dissolved oxygen in the subtropical mode waters. The latter change has clear implications for predicting biogeochemical responses to climate warming.

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