Seasonal and interannual Variability of the Subtropical South Indian
Ocean Sea Surface Salinity Maximum
Abstract
The sea surface salinity (SSS) maximum of the South Indian Ocean (the
SISSS-max) is a high-salinity feature centered at 30°S, 90°E, near the
center of the South Indian subtropical gyre. It is located poleward of a
region of strong evaporation and weak precipitation. Using several
different satellite and in situ datasets, we track changes in this
feature since the early 2000’s. The centroid of the SISSS-max moves
seasonally north and south, furthest north in late winter and farthest
south in late summer. Interannually, the SISSS-max has moved on a
northeast-southwest path about 1500 km in length. The size and maximum
SSS of the feature vary in tandem with this motion. It gets larger
(smaller) and saltier (fresher) as it moves to the northeast (southwest)
closer to (further from) the area of strongest surface freshwater flux.
The area of the SISSS-max almost doubles from its smallest to largest
extent. It was maximum in area in 2006, decreased steadily until it
reached a minimum in 2013, and then increased again. The seasonal
variability of the SISSS-max is controlled by the changes that occur on
its poleward, or southern, side, whereas intereannual variability is
controlled by changes on its equatorward side. The variations in the
SISSS-max are a complex dance between changes in evaporation,
precipitation, wind forcing, gyre-scale ocean circulation and downward
Ekman pumping. Its motion correlated with SSS changes throughout the
South Indian Ocean and is a sensitive indicator of changes in the
basin’s subtropical circulation.