Affiliation:
1. NOAA Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory Seattle WA USA
2. Bucknell University Lewisburg PA USA
3. Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution Woods Hole MA USA
4. Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences East Boothbay ME USA
Abstract
AbstractAntarctic Bottom Water has been warming in recent decades throughout most of the oceans and freshening in regions close to its Indian and Pacific sector sources. We assess warming rates on isobars in the eastern Pacific sector of the Southern Ocean using CTD data collected from shipboard surveys from the early 1990s through the late 2010s together with CTD data collected from Deep Argo floats deployed in the region in January 2023. We show cooling and freshening in the temperature‐salinity relation for water colder than ∼0.4°C. We further find a recent acceleration in the regional bottom water warming rate vertically averaged for pressures exceeding 3,700 dbar, with the 2017/18 to 2023/24 trend of 7.5 (±0.9) m°C yr−1 nearly triple the 1992/95 to 2023/24 trend of 2.8 (±0.2) m°C yr−1. The 0.2°C isotherm descent rate for these same time periods nearly quadruples from 7.8 to 28 m yr−1.
Funder
Global Ocean Monitoring and Observing Program
NOAA Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
National Science Foundation
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
NOAA Research
Publisher
American Geophysical Union (AGU)