in May 2007 Subtropical cyclones can form in a wide band of
latitude, mainly south of the
50th parallel in the
Northern Hemisphere, and north of the
50th parallel in the
Southern Hemisphere. Due to the increased frequency of cyclones which cut off from the main belt of the westerlies during the summer and fall, subtropical cyclones are significantly more frequent across the north Atlantic than the northwestern
Pacific Ocean. In the eastern half of the north Pacific Ocean and north Indian Ocean, the older subtropical cyclone definition term is still used, which requires a weak circulation forming underneath a
mid to upper-tropospheric low which has cut off from the main belt of the westerlies during the cold season (
winter), similar to the north
Atlantic and southwest
Indian Ocean. In the case of the north Indian Ocean, the formation of this type of vortex leads to the onset of
monsoon rains during the
wet season. In the
Southern Hemisphere, subtropical cyclones are regularly observed across southern portions of the
Mozambique Channel. The average sea surface temperature that helps lead to subtropical cyclogenesis is . The south Atlantic environment for formation of subtropical cyclones has both stronger vertical
wind shear and lower
sea surface temperatures, yet subtropical cyclogenesis is regularly observed in the open ocean in the south Atlantic. A second mechanism for formation has been diagnosed for south Atlantic subtropical cyclones: lee cyclogenesis in the region of the Brazil Current.
Another subtropical cyclone was identified at 77.8 degrees longitude in May 2018, just off the coast of Chile. This system was unofficially named
Lexi by researchers. A subtropical cyclone was spotted just off the Chilean coast in January 2022, given the unofficial name Humberto.
Transition from extratropical By gaining tropical characteristics, an extratropical low may transition into a subtropical depression or storm. A subtropical depression/storm may further gain tropical characteristics to become a pure tropical depression or storm, which may eventually develop into a hurricane, and there are at least nine cases of tropical cyclones transforming into a subtropical cyclone in the Atlantic (
Tropical Storm Gilda in 1973,
Subtropical Storm Four in 1974,
Tropical Storm Jose in 1981,
Hurricane Klaus in 1984,
Tropical Storm Allison in 2001,
Tropical Storm Lee in 2011,
Hurricane Humberto in 2013,
Tropical Storm Ian in 2016, and
Hurricane Debby in 2024). The JTWC has recognised many cases of this, with examples including
Typhoon Jelawat in 2018 and
Typhoon Surigae in 2021. There has also only been one recorded case of a storm transitioning from tropical to extratropical back to a subtropical cyclone; only seen with the
Caribbean–Azores hurricane in 1970. Generally, a tropical storm or tropical depression is not called subtropical while it is becoming extratropical and vice versa, after hitting either land or colder waters. This transition normally requires significant instability through the atmosphere, with temperature differences between the underlying ocean and the mid-levels of the
troposphere requiring over 38 °C, or 68 °F, of contrast in this roughly layer of the lower atmosphere. The
mode of the sea surface temperatures that subtropical cyclones form over is . Transition from subtropical cyclones into fully tropical cyclones occurs only in very rare cases over the south Atlantic Ocean, such as
Hurricane Catarina in 2004. ==Characteristics==