“…The STD of the monthly mean SSS values is used as a measure of SSS seasonal variability (Figure 4). Argo shows that large STDs (>0.4 pss) dominates the following areas: the pan-tropical low salinity zone under the ITCZ and SPCZ, the near coastal areas affected by the Amazon plume in the western tropical Atlantic (Fournier, Vandemark, et al, 2017;Grodsky et al, 2014) and the Congo and Niger rivers in the eastern equatorial Atlantic (Chao et al, 2015;Reul et al, 2014), the northwestern Atlantic shelf region particularly south of the St. George's and Newfoundland banks (Grodsky et al, 2017), the northern Gulf of Mexico bordering the Mississippi (da Silva & Castelao, 2018), the vicinity of the western South Atlantic near 35°S, 55°W under the influence of the Rio de la Plata (Piola et al, 2005), the Bay of Bengal impacted by monsoon and the Ganges/Brahmaputra river (Momin et al, 2015;Fournier, Vialard, et al, 2017), and the southeastern Arabian Sea centered at 8°N, 75°E, known as the Laccadive Sea region (also called the Lakshadweep Sea) (Bruce et al, 1994;Schott & McCreary, 2001). All of these high STD regions are in direct response to the freshwater sources from rainfall and/or river discharge, except for the high STD in the Laccadive Sea of the Arabian Sea.…”