The findings suggest that intensifying winds in the region may be increasing the turbulence of the current, rather than increasing its flow rate, researchers said.
Using measurements collected during three scientific cruises to the Agulhas Current, the Indian Ocean's version of the Gulf Stream, researchers at University of Miami in the US estimated the long-term transport of the current leveraging 22 years of satellite data.
They found the Agulhas Current has broadened, not strengthened, since the early 1990s, due to more turbulence from increased eddying and meandering.
The Agulhas, which is hundreds of kilometres long and over 2,000-meters deep, transports large amounts of ocean heat and is considered to have an influence not only on the regional climate of Africa, but on global climate as part of the ocean's global overturning circulation.
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"Changes in western boundary currents could exacerbate or mitigate future climate change," said Lisa Beal, professor at UM Rosenstiel School and lead author of the study.
Previous studies have suggested that accelerated warming rates observed over western boundary current regions, together with ongoing strengthening and expansion of the global wind systems predicted by climate models relate to an intensification and pole-ward shift of western boundary currents as a result of human-made climate change.
"To find decades of broadening, rather than intensification, profoundly impacts our understanding of the Agulhas Current and its future role in climate change," said study co-author Shane Elipot, a UM Rosenstiel School associate scientist.