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The Caribbean through-flow (CTF) is a vital component of Earth’s climate system, facilitating and impacted by heat and salt fluxes from major circulation systems like the North Atlantic Subtropical Gyre (NASTG) and Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC). Here, we show significant changes have occurred in upper ocean water mass properties of the CTF since 1960, including subsurface warming of ~ 0.2 °C decade−1, surface freshening of ~ 0.13 g kg−1 decade−1, and subsurface salinification of ~ 0.05 g kg−1 decade−1. In the upper 0–200 m, temperature and stability increases are nearly 3 and 20 times larger than globally averaged trends, respectively, with implications for tropical cyclones, sea level rise, and marine ecosystems. We show these upper ocean changes are likely impacting water mass formation in the NASTG, thereby indirectly influencing the AMOC. These findings highlight the CTF as a bottleneck for climatically important water masses and emphasize the need for sustained subsurface observations here.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available December 1, 2026
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In unconfined environments, bacterial motility patterns are an explicit expression of the internal states of the cell. Bacteria operating a run-and-tumble behavioral program swim forward when in a ‘run’ state, and are stalled in place when in a reorienting ‘tumble’ state. However, in natural environments, motility dynamics often represent a convolution of bacterial behavior and environmental constraints. Recent investigations showed thatEscherichia coliswimming through highly confined porous media exhibit extended periods of ‘trapping’ punctuated by forward ‘hops’, a seemingly drastic restructuring of run-and-tumble behavior. We introduce a microfluidic device to systematically explore bacterial movement in a range of spatially structured environments, bridging the extremes of unconfined and highly confined conditions. We observe that trajectories reflecting unconstrained expression of run-and-tumble behavior and those reflecting ‘hop-and-trap’ dynamics coexist in all structured environments considered, with ensemble dynamics transitioning smoothly between these two extremes. We present a unifying ‘swim-and-stall’ framework to characterize this continuum of observed motility patterns and demonstrate that bacteria employing a consistent set of behavioral rules can present motility patterns that smoothly transition between the two extremes. Our results indicate that the control program underlying run-and-tumble motility is robust to changes in the environment, allowing flagellated bacteria to navigate and adapt to a diverse range of complex, dynamic habitats using the same set of behavioral rules.more » « less
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Abstract Caribbean through‐flow accounts for two‐thirds of the Florida Current and consequently is an important conduit of heat and salt fluxes in the upper limb of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC). Considering there is evidence that up to one‐half of the Florida Current originates as South Atlantic Water (SAW), determining the distribution of SAW throughout the Caribbean Island passages is important as this constitutes the major pathway for cross‐equatorial AMOC return flow. The Anegada Passage (AP) is a major pathway for subtropical gyre inflow and suggested to be a potential SAW inflow pathway worth revisiting. Here, we present glider‐based observations of temperature, salinity and subsurface velocity that represent the first observations of any type in the AP in nearly 20 years. An isopycnal water mass analysis is conducted to quantify the transport of water masses with South Atlantic or North Atlantic origin. Two potentially new aspects of AP transport are revealed. The total AP transport (−4.8 Sv) is shown to be larger than previously estimated, potentially by up to a factor of two. The transport of SAW through the AP (−1.66 Sv) is also shown to be larger than previously estimated, which represents 35% of the total transport reported here and 28% of the SAW entering the Caribbean north of the Windward Island Passages. These results indicate the AP may be an important pathway for cross‐equatorial AMOC return flow. These results also provide evidence that gliders with acoustic doppler profilers are a viable method for measuring island passage transport.more » « less
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