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Occupying about 14 % of the world's surface, the Southern Ocean plays a
fundamental role in ocean and atmosphere circulation, carbon cycling and Antarctic ice-sheet dynamics. Unfortunately, high interannual variability
and a dearth of instrumental observations before the 1950s limits our
understanding of how marine–atmosphere–ice domains interact on multi-decadal
timescales and the impact of anthropogenic forcing. Here we integrate
climate-sensitive tree growth with ocean and atmospheric observations on
southwest Pacific subantarctic islands that lie at the boundary of polar and
subtropical climates (52–54° S). Our annually resolved temperature
reconstruction captures regional change since the 1870s and demonstrates a
significant increase in variability from the 1940s, a phenomenon predating
the observational record. Climate reanalysis and modelling show a parallel
change in tropical Pacific sea surface temperatures that generate an
atmospheric Rossby wave train which propagates across a large part of the
Southern Hemisphere during the austral spring and summer. Our results suggest that
modern observed high interannual variability was established across the
mid-twentieth century, and that the influence of contemporary equatorial
Pacific temperatures may now be a permanent feature across the mid- to high
latitudes.