Abstract

<p lang="en-US" align="justify"><span lang="en-US">Sub-Antarctic Mode Waters (SAMW), forming in the deep winter mixed layers in the Sub-Antarctic Zone (SAZ) to the north of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC), connect the ocean thermocline with the atmosphere, contributing to ocean carbon and heat uptake and transporting high-latitude nutrients northward, to fuel primary production at low latitudes. The important climatic role of SAMW is controlled by the rate of fluid subduction from the deep winter mixed layers and the concentration of heat, carbon and nutrients at the end of winter. These concentrations depend on a range of processes, both physical (air-sea exchange, transport of Antarctic waters across the ACC, along ACC advection, eddy fluxes, diapycnal mixing, etc.) and biogeochemical ( biological uptake, export and remineralisation), whose relative contributions are very poorly understood. With a Lagrangian particle-tracking experiment in a data-assimilative coupled physico-biogeochemical model of the Southern Ocean (B-SOSE), we assess the origin of the water masses reaching SAMW formation regions and the physico- and biogeochemical transformations occurring along their transport pathways. Our results underline the importance of the advection of subtropical waters along the ACC for the sequestration of heat and anthropogenic carbon and in modulating the fertilization of the low-latitude thermocline.</span></p>

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