Abstract
The Agulhas Current (AC) is the strongest western boundary current in the Southern Hemisphere and is key for weather and climate patterns, both regionally and globally. Its heat transfer into both the midlatitude South Indian Ocean and South Atlantic is of global significance. A new composite coral record (Ifaty and Tulear massive Porites corals), is linked to historical AC sea surface temperature (SST) instrumental data, showing robust correlations. The composite coral SST data start in 1660 and comprise 200 years more than the AC instrumental record. Numerical modelling exhibits that this new coral derived SST record is representative for the wider core region of the AC. AC SSTs variabilities show distinct cooling through the Little Ice Age and warming during the late 18th, 19th and 20th century, with significant decadal variability superimposed. Furthermore, the AC SSTs are teleconnected with the broad southern Indian and Atlantic Oceans, showing that the AC system is pivotal for inter-ocean heat exchange south of Africa.
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Introduction
The greater Agulhas Current (AC) system near the southern tip of Africa is a key component in the global climate system through its role in inter-ocean heat and salt transport, thereby influencing the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation1,2,3 (hereafter AMOC). Modeling experiments suggest that the increased export of AC waters into the Atlantic Ocean, through the so-called Agulhas leakage, results in an enhanced AMOC albeit with a lag of 15–30 years4,5,6,7. There is mounting evidence that the AC SSTs have increased since the early 1980's8. The recent warming is thought to be related to an increase in ocean heat transport in response to an increase in wind stress curl in the southern Indian Ocean trade winds8,9.
The AC is the strongest western boundary current in the Southern Hemisphere and releases a lot of heat to the atmosphere throughout the year. Relatively strong winds over the southern AC lead to strong latent heat loss from the surface, while further north off the east coast of South Africa, there is often convective cloud cover over its warm core10,11,12,13. As a result, under suitable atmospheric conditions, the AC can influence severe weather systems over South Africa, Botswana, Zimbabwe and Mozambique such as cut-off lows14, thunderstorms15 and mesoscale convective complexes16.
The AC region is modulated by interannual and decadal climate modes in the Indian and Pacific Ocean, partly through their influence on the circulation in the South Indian Ocean17,18,19,20 and also through local ocean-atmosphere interactions driven by these modes17,21,22,23. This strong interannual and decadal variability may be superimposed on the long-term trend in AC SST that could partly be related to changes in the subtropical Indian Ocean gyre strength on these time scales24,25,26. The Indian Ocean gyres weaken during El Niño or positive Indian Ocean Dipole (hereafter IOD) events whereas they strengthen during La Niña or negative IOD events. The same holds true for subtropical Indian Ocean dipole (hereafter SIOD) phases18,20. On decadal time scales, ENSO-like (El Niño-Southern Oscillation) decadal variability and/or the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) is thought to exert an influence on southwestern Indian Ocean SST and atmospheric circulation22,27.
Historical gridded SST data and reconstructions reveal that the southern Mozambique Channel (MC), one of the source regions of the AC, has also experienced one of the highest rates in ocean warming across the southern Indian Ocean since 195028. The instrumental SST reconstructions for the southern MC and the AC core regions show considerable multidecadal variability (Fig. 1). A single 334 year long coral geochemical proxy record from Ifaty reef off southwestern Madagascar in the southern MC also revealed an increase in SST after the 1970's20. This coral record revealed a non-stationary relationship of local southern MC SST with ENSO and a link with the Pacific Decadal Oscillation27. These single core observations, however, are limited and may not represent the wider southern MC or the AC core region as yet.
The aims of this paper are to produce a new composite coral record to obtain a SST record representing SST changes in the wider southern MC and the AC core regions. Here, we present a new three-core coral composite oxygen isotope record from the Ifaty and Tulear coral reefs off SW Madagascar, which covers SST variability for the past 334 years (1660–1994). Through modeling, we investigated whether the southern MC SST data are representative for the downstream AC core region. Finally, we aim to infer cross-ocean relationships in the Southern Hemisphere using SST records, elucidating the pivotal role of the AC region at the cross roads between the Indian and Atlantic Oceans.
Results
Connectivity between the Ifaty coral site and the Agulhas Current core region, at 32°S
First, we tested connectivity in ocean properties, namely SST and salinity (SSS), between the Ifaty coral site and the Agulhas core region at 32°S, the so-called CAP (Lagrangian virtual floats capture area) area in Figure 2. We use the 5-daily output from a 1948 to 2007 hindcast of a 1/4°, eddy-permitting, basin-scale ocean model29 (Fig. 2). To establish connectivity between the Ifaty site and the downstream AC core region, we correlate the detrended monthly-mean SSS and SST time series from Ifaty with those extracted across the AC source regions and western Indian Ocean boundary (Fig. 2a, b). Our results suggest that SSS and SST across most of the regions of the southern MC and southwestern Indian Ocean boundary are correlated. Further, we find a strong SST and SSS relationship between the Ifaty site and AC core region, shown by the same inter-annual surface variability with zero lag (Fig. 2c).
To assess the time scales of horizontal ocean transport (advection) between the Ifaty site and the AC at 32°S, Lagrangian virtual floats are deployed in the surface waters (z < 100 m) at the former location. Figure 2d shows that 76.3% of the particles released reach the AC in 3 years, with a median transit time between the two sites of 240 days. The advective time scale is quite long, whereas the lag between the two SST and SSS signals is near zero (Fig. 2c). This suggests two possibilities: 1) that both sites happen to ‘receive’ the same SST and SSS signal through ocean transport from upstream, or 2) that the signals are driven by large-scale atmospheric processes, influencing both the wider MC area and the AC core region. Nevertheless, our model data confirm the physical link in SST between the MC and the AC core regions and return flow region. The modeling experiments show that the spatial and temporal correlation of SSTs and SSS of the wider Agulhas region is high, including the source areas between the coral sites in the southern MC and the AC core region, for instance in the CAP area at 32°S.
Coral-based SST reconstruction for the southern Mozambique Channel and the Agulhas Current core region
The new SST reconstruction is based on three Porites coral oxygen isotope (δ18O) records at annual resolution from Ifaty and Tulear coral reefs off southwestern Madagascar, 43°E, 23°S, covering the past 334 years (Fig. 3a; Fig. S1). The new coral composite comprises three corals from 1905 to 1994, two from 1881 onwards and a single coral covering 1660 to 1880 (Fig. 3b). The coral proxy data and measurement procedures are described in detail in the Methods. In brief, all proxy records were centered by removing the 1961–1990 mean. A composite annually resolved coral temperature record was then constructed by (1) converting each δ18O record to temperature units, (2) calculating the arithmetic mean of the coral SST records from each site and (3) averaging the mean SST records from both sites (Fig. S1). For the proxy-temperature conversion, we use the mean of the published δ18O-temperature relationship30 (−0.2‰/°C for δ18O). This has the advantage that our coral temperature reconstruction does not depend on linear regression with instrumental SST data, which has rather large errors31. The composite chronology extends from 1660 to 1994 (Fig. 3).
The composite SST record indicates strong multidecadal variability throughout the 334 years. The composite mirrors the interannual and decadal variability of AC core region SST since 1854 in ERSST, since 1850 in HadSST3 and since 1870 in HadSST1 (Figure 3). The coolest period in SW Madagascar and the AC core region on record pre-1900 is observed between 1675 and 1720 and includes the Late Maunder Minimum (1675–1710), the coolest period during the Little Ice Age. The cool period shows strong interannual variability. The warmest periods on record pre-1900 for both SW Madagascar and the AC core region are observed between 1660–1670, 1770 to 1805 and 1870 to 1900. The warming rate between 1720 and 1800 was rapid at 0.13 ± 0.02°C/decade. The warm period between 1870 to 1900 is also very prominent for both SW Madagascar and the AC core region. This period is punctuated by strong interannual warm anomalies with cooler years in between. Similarly strong interannual variability is also observed for the 1770 to 1805 warm period. SST was lower in the early 20th century and increased markedly after 1970 for both SW Madagascar and the AC core region.
Validation of SST trends in the instrumental and coral SST records
Absolute warming rates for our coral index and instrumental SST have been estimated using ordinary least squares (OLS) regression, which mainly depends on the δ18O-SST conversion. We have estimated the warming rates obtained using published δ18O-SST relationships30 with the mean, upper and lower estimates as uncertainty bounds for the regression (−0.2 ± 0.02‰/°C). We use the period since 1900 because SST products are less reliable prior to that date.
We found a steady warming in the coral composite SST record since 1900 (1.07 ± 0.1°C), with most of the increase in the warming rates after 1970 (1.03 ± 0.3°C). The magnitude of the warming inferred from the corals is 0.12 ± 0.02°C/decade since 1900 and ranges between 0.13°C and 0.11°C/decade (using the upper and lower limits of δ18O-SST relationships). We speculate that much of the observed spread in proxy-SST relationships reflects statistical uncertainties since the error of the OLS regression obtained using the mean slopes equals the spread of the warming rates estimates using the upper and lower limits of proxy-SST relationships. The coral composite SST reconstruction has a higher correlation with instrumental SST for both the Ifaty-Tulear and Agulhas Current core regions than any single coral record (Table 1; Table S1 and S2). The warming trend after the mid-1970's in the coral composite record agrees substantially better with instrumental SST than the previously published Ifaty-4 coral record alone20.
To validate the trend in our coral composite SST record, we extracted SST records for the Ifaty-Tulear region (centred at 43°E, 23°S) and the AC core region (26°–28°E, 34°–36°S) from three gridded SST products for the annual average computed from March to February: HadSST132 from 1870, HadSST333 from 1850 and ERSSTv3b (hereafter ERSST34) from 1854 (Fig. 3). All SST products are based on ICOADS data35, but were constructed with different strategies for historical bias correction and gridding. SST data for the Ifaty-Tulear region is based on extremely sparse observations in the ICOADS35 data (Fig. S2). The new 5° × 5° gridded HadSST3 data set is based on a comprehensive reanalysis of the data and metadata in the ICOADS database and is bias-corrected with improved error estimates33. We identified the gridbox in HadSST3 along the Agulhas Current (24°–29°E, 31°–36°S) which is the most complete back to 1850 for the greater Agulhas Current region (Fig. 1).
The long-term warming rates indicated by the SST products for the Ifaty-Tulear region since 1900 clearly differ, yet agree on the strong post 1970 warming. The warming rates per decade since 1900 are 0.054 ± 0.008°C (ERSST34), 0.081 ± 0.01 (HadSST132) and 0.043 ± 0.01 (HadSST333 since 1909). The absolute warming between 1970 to 2005 ranges between 0.39 ± 0.15°C (HadSST3), 0.42 ± 0.1°C (ERSST) and 0.71 ± 0.12°C (HadSST1).
Our coral–based SST reconstruction tracks instrumental AC core region SST since 1854 in ERSST, since 1870 in HadSST1 and since 1850 in HadSST3 (Fig. 3; Tab. 1). We found significant correlations for detrended coral composite SST with AC core region HadSST1 (r = 0.57, P < 0.001, DF = 124), HadSST3 (r = 0.59, p < 0.001, DF = 142) and ERSST (r = 0.54, p < 0.01, DF = 140) for the maximum number of years in each SST dataset (Tab. 1). The correlations were still significant for an early verification period between 1850 to 1910 with AC HadSST3 (r = 0.62, p = 0.0005, DF = 59), although lower with HadSST1 (r = 0.54, p = 0.005) and ERSST (r = 0.4, p = 0.03). The correlation between the coral composite and AC core region SST is higher than with Ifaty-Tulear region SST from all SST products (Tab. 1; Tab. S1). This is most probably due to the sparse to non-existent observations for the Ifaty-Tulear region (Fig. S2).
All records, including the coral composite SST, show multidecadal to centennial variability in SST since at least 1870 with two warm periods between 1870 to ~1900 and 1970 to 2005, bracketed by cooler SST in between (Fig. 3). Interannual warm peaks are observed during the 20th century, the most prominent between 1939–1942 and the late 1950's to early 1960's.
Relationships with regional and large-scale temperatures
Our new SST reconstructions also show excellent correlation with an annual mean South African air temperature reconstruction (AT) from a stalagmite record36 over the entire 334 year period (Fig. 4). The correlation is strongest on decadal time scales applying a Loess filter with a cutoff at 8 years (r = 0.59, p = 0.008, N = 308; Fig. 3c). Both, the coral composite SST and stalagmite AT indicate the period between 1690 to 1740 as the coolest on record. In addition, both records indicate relatively high temperatures during the late 18th and 19th century, a cool period in the early 20th century followed by a warming towards the end of the 20th century.
To assess the correlations of the coral composite with global SST on decadal time scales, we applied a Loess low-pass filter with a cutoff at 8 years. Spatial correlations between coral composite SST and global SST, from HadSST1, revealed statistically significant correlations (p < 0.05) on decadal time scales (Fig. 5) The highest correlations are found in the AC region and across the southern Indian Ocean between 20 to 60°S stretching towards the western and southern Australian coast (Fig. 5). Positive correlations also emerge off the eastern coast of South America and the (sub)tropical Atlantic. Other teleconnected regions with positive correlations are the northern Indian Ocean, the western and northeastern Pacific.
We also performed an EOF (Empirical Orthogonal Function) analysis of detrended mean annual HadSST1 in the southern Indian Ocean (10–40°S, 20–130°E) to reveal the dominant SST patterns. EOF1 of HadSST1 showed positive loading across the southern Indian Ocean between South Africa and western Australia. The PC1 time series of this EOF1 pattern resembles the multidecadal SST record for the Agulhas Current region and the coral composite SST (Fig. S3). Our new coral composite SST is strongly related with PC1 showing significant correlations (p < 0.001; Suppl. Tables S4 to S6 and Fig. S3). EOF2 shows a dipole pattern in SST between the southwestern Indian Ocean east of Madagascar and the southeastern Indian Ocean offshore of Indonesia/NW Australia (Fig. S3). This pattern is related to ENSO. PC2 is not correlated with the coral composite when the entire period from 1870 to 1994 is considered. However, after 1950 the correlation is significant (r = 0.44, p < 0.01, DF = 40). This finding is consitent with Zinke et al. (2004)20 who showed evidence for a non-stationary relationship of southern MC SST with ENSO. EOF3 showed a dipole pattern in SST between the tropical and subtropical/mid-latitude Indian Ocean. EOF3 comprises the well-known subtropical dipole modes that can be found across all southern ocean basins, especially in austral summer. The PC3 time series of this EOF3 pattern is positively correlated with our coral composite SST (Suppl. Table S7 and Fig. S3). This finding is consistent with Zinke et al. (2004)20, who showed evidence for a correlation of southern MC SST with the subtropical dipole mode of the southern Indian Ocean.
Discussion
Our new annually resolved coral composite SST reconstruction tracks instrumental AC core region SST since the late 19th century observed in the three SST products: ERSST, HadSST1 and HadSST3. Based on this strong relationship, we are able to resolve historical SST variability and long-term changes in the southern MC and the AC core region back to 1660. We observed strong multidecadal to centennial-scale oscillations in SST over the past 334 years in the coral composite SST and since at least 1850 in three SST datasets. We confirmed the period between 1670 and 1720 as the coolest period on record, which suggests that transport of warm water from the tropical Indian Ocean towards the AC was diminished at this time. We find warm excursions between 1770 and 1800, the late 19th century and post 1976 where warm water transport to the AC was at its peak. The current warming after 1976 to 1994 is not unprecedented since similar warming rates were observed from 1720 to 1800 following peak cooling during the Late Maunder Minimum during the Little Ice Age. Yet, instrumental SST beyond 1994 show that the warming of the past 20 years was exceptional in the context of the past 334 years8 (Figs. 1 and 3). However, changes in δ18O of seawater through ocean advection and/or precipitation-evaporation changes could have contributed to lower coral δ18O and therefore a warm bias during the late 18th century. A previous study coupled (bi)monthly resolved Ifaty δ18O and Sr/Ca SST proxies for the a single core (Ifaty-4) and suggested that variations in δ18O of seawater might have influenced the SST estimates during the late 18th and 19th centuries20. These periods stand out as particularly warm decades in our new reconstruction. Since our new reconstruction pre-1882 is still based on the Ifaty-4 record only, a δ18O seawater contribution cannot be excluded. Nevertheless, the three instrumental SST datasets agree with the coral composite SST in showing a warm period with strong interannual oscillations pre-1900.
In addition, the recently published air temperature reconstruction for southern Africa from a stalagmite record36 agrees with the coral composite in showing higher temperatures in the region during the late 18th and 19th century (Fig. 4). A rainfall reconstruction for southern Africa37 revealed that the 19th century was wetter than the 20th century which could be partly related to relatively warm SST in the AC region during the early and late 19th century observed in our SST reconstruction. Using observations and AGCM experiments, Reason and Mulenga (1999)38 showed that SSTs in the AC region are related to South African rainfall on interannual and multidecadal time scales. This adds confidence to the reality of a relatively warm late 19th century in the AC region, only matched and/or exceeded in the period after 1976 (Figs. 1, 3 and 4).
Our reconstruction is in concert with typical spatial teleconnection pattern of the AC region SST with global SST on interannual and decadal time scales. We did not find an ENSO spatial correlation pattern, which agreed with the weak or non-stationary ENSO correlation on seasonal and mean annual time scales with instrumental SST for the AC region20. Yet, we found significant correlations with the western and northeastern Pacific SST. This pattern resembles to some extent the ENSO-like decadal or Pacific Decadal Oscillation pattern in SST27. The strongest relationship was found with the southern Indian Ocean and off the east coast of South America. The strong correlations with the southern Indian Ocean are found along the AC return flow. The teleconnections with the South Atlantic are found along the advective pathways of the Agulhas leakage7,39.
The strongest SST teleconnections across the southern Indian and Atlantic Ocean point to a dominant role of the AC system for SST variability across the subtropical to mid-latitude Indian and Atlantic Ocean (Fig. 5). A recent study of mid-latitude islands across the southern part of all ocean basins also revealed that the Agulhas system is likely a dominant driver of climate variability for the mid- to high latitude Indian Ocean islands40. The recent spatial warming trend pattern in the southern Indian Ocean is characterised by two warming centers, one in the southwestern and the other in the southeastern Indian Ocean (Fig. S3). This pattern strongly resembles EOF1 of HadSST1 for the southern Indian Ocean (Fig. S3). PC1 of this EOF1 showed multidecadal SST variability and no linear warming trend (Fig. S3). Thus, the two centers of warming most possibly underwent similar multidecadal SST changes and the recent pattern is part of this natural multidecadal variability. The mechanism driving this multidecadal variability might be related to large-scale wind forcing across the southern Indian and Atlantic Ocean17,41. Lee et al. (2011)39 showed that the increased heat content across the southern Atlantic since the 1950's was largely related to an increase in inter-ocean heat exchange with the Indian Ocean. The warming in the South Atlantic after 1950 was probably reinforced by a warm Agulhas leakage and its westward and northward transport into the Atlantic. Similar warming of the South Atlantic should have occurred during the late 18th and 19th century according to our AC core region SST reconstruction. This assumption needs to be tested with coupled atmosphere-ocean models.
In conclusion, our new coral composite SST record for the Agulhas Current system showed strong multidecadal SST variability in this globally important ocean current and that the warming over the last three decades is not unprecedented in the context of the multi-centennial record.
Methods
Coral core collection and sampling
Coral cores from massive Porites sp. at Ifaty and Tulear reefs were collected in October 1995 during the European Union TESTREFF program from the Ifaty-Ranobé lagoon and the Great Barrier of Tulear (southwest Madagascar20). The Ifaty and Tulear coral reef sites are described in detail in Zinke et al., 200420 and Bruggeman et al., 201243, respectively. Core Ifaty-4 (4.06 m length), core Ifaty-1 (1.93 m length) and Tulear-3 (1.80 m length) were obtained from a depth of 1.1 m, 1.8 m and 0.6 m below mean tide level. The average growth rate of core Ifaty-4 was 0.99 ± 0.15 cm per year, whereas Ifaty-1 averaged 1.28 ± 0.24 cm and Tulear-3 1.54 ± 0.25 cm per year.
All cores were sectioned to a thickness of 7 mm and slabs were cleaned in 10% hydrogen peroxide for 48 h to remove organic matter at GEOMAR Kiel. Then, slabs were rinsed several times with demineralized water and dried with compressed air. For complete removal of any moisture within the coral skeleton the sample was put into an oven for 24 h at 40°C. The slabs were X-rayed to reveal annual density banding.
A high resolution profile for stable isotope analysis on core Ifaty-4 was drilled using a computer-controlled drilling device along the growth axis as observed in X-ray-radiograph-positive prints20. Subsamples were drilled at a distance of 1 mm for the years 1995–1920 and 2 mm for the older part of the core; the drilling depth was 3 mm using a 0.5 mm dental drill at 1000 rpm. The 1 or 2 mm sample spacing provides approximately monthly or bimonthly resolution, respectively. Cores Ifaty-1 and Tular-3 were sampled at annual resolution along the major growth axis following the density pattern from summer to summer in any given year established from X-ray-radiograph-positive prints.
Analytical procedures δ18O
The high-resolution samples of core Ifaty-4 were reacted with 100% H3PO4 at 75°C in an automated carbonate reaction device (Kiel Device) connected to a Finnigan MAT 252 mass spectrometer (University Erlangen). Average precision based on duplicate sample analysis and on multiple analysis of NBS 19 is ±0.07‰ for δ18O (1σ). The annual samples were reacted with 100% H3PO4 at 75°C in an automated carbonate reaction device (Kiel Device) connected to a Finnigan MAT 252 mass spectrometer at the VU University of Amsterdam. Average precision based on duplicate sample analysis and on multiple analysis of NBS 19 is ±0.08‰ for δ18O (1σ).
Proxy data treatment
We used the already published, (bi)monthly resolved Ifaty-4 coral δ18O time series from 1660 to 199420. The high resolution of the Ifaty-4 coral δ18O enabled us to compute a precise annual chronology averaged between March to February. We used the Ifaty-4 core as our best dated reference time series to ensure that the yearly sampled chronologies of Ifaty-1 and Tulear-3 aligned well. The three proxy records were first centered by removing the 1961–1990 mean. A composite annually resolved coral temperature record was then constructed by (1) converting each proxy record to temperature units, (2) calculating the arithmetic mean of the coral SST records from each site and (3) averaging the mean records from both sites. For the proxy-temperature conversion we use the mean of the published δ18O-temperature relationship (−0.2 ± 0.02‰/°C for δ18O30). This resulted in a time series of relative SST changes at annual resolution against the 1961 to 1990 mean.
We estimated the uncertainties of the coral composite SST reconstruction following the method of Nurhati et al. (2011)31 for relative SST reconstructions. The errors are displayed in Figure 3 as grey shaded envelopes for each individual year. Uncertainty in the relative annual mean SST reconstruction takes into account errors associated with (i) the analytical precision of the δ18O measurements (±0.4°C) and (ii) the calibration slope of the δ18O–SST calibration (±0.1°C). Taken together, the annual mean coral δ18O-derived SST error is ±0.41°C (1σ), quadratically combining terms (i)–(ii).
Uncertainty estimates in the relative SST reconstruction trend was estimated taking into account errors associated with (i) the slope error of the SST trend 1900 to 1994 (±0.16°C), (ii) the analytical precision of the δ18O measurements (±0.4°C) and (iii) the calibration slope error of the δ18O–SST calibration (±0.1°C). Taken together, the twentieth-century coral δ18O-derived SST trend error is 0.44°C, quadratically combining terms (i)–(iii).
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Acknowledgements
This work was supported as part of the SINDOCOM grant under the Dutch NWO program ‘Climate Variability’, grant 854.00034/035. Additional support comes from the NWO ALW project CLIMATCH, grant 820.01.009 and the Western Indian Ocean Marine Science Association through the Marine Science for Management programme under grant MASMA/CC/2010/02. JZ was supported by an Indian Ocean Marine Research Centre UWA/AIMS/CSIRO collaborative assistant professorial fellowship. BL was supported by the European Community's Seventh Framework Programme FP7/2007-2013-Marie-Curie ‘GATEWAYS’ ITN, grant agreement 238512 and ICE-MASA. Financial support to WCD through the Leibniz Award (DU 129/33) is very much appreciated. Model simulations were performed at DST/CSIR CHPC, Cape Town. We acknowledge support from the SCOR/WCRP/IAPSO working group 136 on the climatic importance of the greater Agulhas system. We thank the VU University Amsterdam (Netherlands) for assistance with stable isotope analysis, especially Suzan Verdegaal. With thank Georg Heiss from the Free University of Berlin and the EU TESTREFF party for sampling the coral cores.
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J.Z., B.L. and C.J.C.R. designed the study. J.Z. analysed the coral and instrumental data. B.L. and C.J.C.R. provided and analysed the ocean model data and EOF's. J.Z., B.L. and C.J.C.R. wrote the initial draft, in discussion with C.D. and D.K. All authors helped with the interpretation of the data and writing the manuscript.
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Zinke, J., Loveday, B., Reason, C. et al. Madagascar corals track sea surface temperature variability in the Agulhas Current core region over the past 334 years. Sci Rep 4, 4393 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1038/srep04393
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/srep04393
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