Ocean Temperature
How the sea is heated and how its temperature changes with depth and latitude — including the all-important thermocline.
The big idea
Think first
Dive straight down in the open ocean and the water stays warm, then turns icy cold at a certain depth. What causes that abrupt change? Keep the question in mind as you read.
The temperature of the sea governs marine life, coastal climate and the great weather systems of the planet. Unlike the land, the ocean heats and cools slowly and unevenly. Its temperature also falls in a distinctive way with depth. Understanding ocean temperature (its source, its layers and its distribution) is core physical geography.
Source and Layers
The chief source of the ocean's heat is the Sun: the radiant energy received at the surface is called insolation. Because water mixes and evaporates, heat spreads differently than on land.
Going down from the surface, the ocean has three temperature layers:
- The first (surface) layer: warm water about 500 m thick, 20–25°C in the tropics. It is well developed all year in the tropics.
- The thermocline: the middle zone where temperature falls rapidly with depth. This sharp transition layer is the key feature of ocean temperature.
- The deep layer: very cold water extending to the ocean floor.
In the polar regions there is only one cold layer from surface to bottom.
Check yourself
In the open tropical ocean, which layer is marked by a rapid fall of temperature with depth?
Horizontal Distribution
Across the surface, ocean temperature is controlled mainly by latitude:
- it is highest near the equator (about 27°C, actually a little north of it) and decreases towards the poles (down to about −1.9°C),
- the average surface temperature is about 26.7°C,
- the rate of decrease is roughly 0.5°C per degree of latitude, and
- the Northern Hemisphere is slightly warmer than the Southern because it has more land.
Warm and cold ocean currents modify this pattern. Warm currents (like the Gulf Stream) raise coastal temperatures, while cold currents (like the Labrador) lower them.
Why land and sea differ
Water has a higher specific heat than land. It needs more energy to warm up, and it releases its heat slowly. Land heats and cools quickly. The land-ocean temperature contrast is therefore greater in winter than in summer, because in winter the continents cool far more than the oceans do.
This difference shows clearly on temperature maps. Isotherms are lines joining places with the same temperature. In January, the Northern Hemisphere winter, the oceans are warmer than the landmasses. The isotherms therefore bend poleward (north) over the oceans and equatorward (south) over the continents. Warm currents strengthen this bending. The North Atlantic Drift, a warm current that continues the Gulf Stream, pushes the January isotherms far to the north over the North Atlantic.
East-west contrasts within a basin
Temperature also varies from one side of an ocean to the other at the same latitude, because the prevailing winds drag surface water across the basin:
- Tropics: the trade winds push warm surface water westward. The western sections of the oceans are warmer than the eastern.
- Temperate latitudes: the westerlies drive warm water eastward. The eastern sections are warmer than the western.
Annual range across hemispheres and basins
The yearly swing of surface temperature is not the same everywhere:
- Hemispheres: the annual range is greater in the Northern Hemisphere than in the Southern, because the north has more land.
- Basins: the annual range is greater in the Atlantic than in the Pacific. The Atlantic is narrower and flanked by more land, so nearby continents impose their larger seasonal swings on it.
Previous-year questions
Previous-year question
2025UPSCConsider the following statements: Statement I: In January, in the Northern Hemisphere, the isotherms bend equatorward while crossing the landmasses, and poleward while crossing the oceans. Statement II: In January, the air over the oceans is warmer than that over the landmasses in the Northern Hemisphere. Which one of the following is correct in respect of the above statements?
Previous-year question
2024UPSCWhich of the following is/are correct inference/inferences from isothermal maps in the month of January?
- The isotherms deviate to the north over the ocean and to the south over the continent.
- The presence of cold ocean currents, Gulf Stream and North Atlantic Drift make the North Atlantic Ocean colder and the isotherms bend towards the north.
Select the answer using the code given below:
Previous-year question
2023UPSCConsider the following statements:
Statement-I: The temperature contrast between continents and oceans is greater during summer than in winter.
Statement-II: The specific heat of water is more than that of land surface. Which one of the following is correct in respect of the above statements?
Previous-year question
2021UPSCConsider the following statements: 1) In the tropical zone, the western sections of the oceans are warmer than the eastern sections owing to the influence of trade winds. 2) In the temperate zone, westerlies make the eastern sections of oceans warmer than the western sections. Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
Previous-year question
2013UPSCThe annual range of temperature in the interior of the continents is high as compared to coastal areas. What is/are the reason/reasons?
- Thermal difference between land and water
- Variation in altitude between continents and oceans
- Presence of strong winds in the interior
- Heavy rains in the interior as compared to coasts
Select the correct answer using the codes given below.
Previous-year question
2007UPSCConsider the following statements:
- The annual range of temperature is greater in the Pacific Ocean than that in the Atlantic Ocean.
- The annual range of temperature is greater in the Northern Hemisphere than that in the Southern Hemisphere.
Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
Vertical Distribution
With depth, temperature falls, but not evenly:
- the surface receives the insolation and is warmest,
- temperature drops sharply through the thermocline, and
- below it, the water is uniformly cold into the deep ocean, where temperature changes very little.
The daily (diurnal) range of surface temperature is tiny (about 1°C). The annual range is also small over the open ocean. Water heats and cools slowly, so the sea moderates the climate of nearby coasts.
Ocean Mean Temperature (OMT)
Scientists summarise the heat of the upper ocean with the Ocean Mean Temperature (OMT). It is the mean temperature of the water column from the surface down to the depth of the 26°C isotherm. That depth is not a fixed value. It varies with region and season. In the south-western Indian Ocean it lies at about 129 m during January–March. OMT measured during January–March is used to predict whether the coming monsoon rainfall will be above or below the long-term mean.
Previous-year questions
Previous-year question
2020UPSCWith reference to Ocean Mean Temperature (OMT), which of the following statements is/are correct?
- OMT is measured up to a depth of 26°C isotherm which is 129 meters in the south-western Indian Ocean during January-March.
- OMT collected during January-March can be used in assessing whether the amount of rainfall in monsoon will be less or more than a certain long-term mean.
Select the correct answer using the code given below:
Key takeaways
- The Sun's insolation heats the ocean surface. Water heats and cools slowly and unevenly.
- Three layers: a warm surface layer (~500 m), the thermocline (temperature falls rapidly), and the cold deep layer
- Surface temperature is highest near the equator (~27°C) and falls towards the poles (~0.5°C per degree latitude), averaging ~26.7°C
- Warm currents raise coastal temperatures and cold currents lower them. The ocean's small temperature range moderates coastal climate.
- In January, isotherms bend poleward over the warmer oceans.
- Winter shows the greatest land-ocean temperature contrast.
- Tropics: western ocean sections warmer; temperate latitudes: eastern warmer.
- Annual range: greater in Northern Hemisphere and in the Atlantic.
- January–March OMT (to the 26°C isotherm) predicts monsoon rainfall.
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