Arctic Ocean Warming Contributes to Reduced Polar Ice Cap

Author:

Polyakov Igor V.1,Timokhov Leonid A.2,Alexeev Vladimir A.1,Bacon Sheldon3,Dmitrenko Igor A.4,Fortier Louis5,Frolov Ivan E.2,Gascard Jean-Claude6,Hansen Edmond7,Ivanov Vladimir V.1,Laxon Seymour8,Mauritzen Cecilie9,Perovich Don10,Shimada Koji11,Simmons Harper L.1,Sokolov Vladimir T.2,Steele Michael12,Toole John13

Affiliation:

1. International Arctic Research Center, University of Alaska Fairbanks, Fairbanks, Alaska

2. Arctic and Antarctic Research Institute, St. Petersburg, Russia

3. National Oceanography Centre, Southampton, United Kingdom

4. Leibniz Institute of Marine Sciences, University of Kiel, IFM-GEOMAR, Kiel, Germany

5. Québec-Océan and ArcticNet, Université Laval, Quebec City, Quebec, Canada

6. LOCEAN, Pierre and Marie Curie University, Paris, France

7. Norwegian Polar Institute, Tromsø, Norway

8. University College London, London, United Kingdom

9. Norwegian Meteorological Institute, Oslo, Norway

10. Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory, Hanover, New Hampshire

11. Tokyo University of Marine Science and Technology, Tokyo, Japan

12. Polar Science Center, Applied Physics Lab, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington

13. Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, Massachusetts

Abstract

Abstract Analysis of modern and historical observations demonstrates that the temperature of the intermediate-depth (150–900 m) Atlantic water (AW) of the Arctic Ocean has increased in recent decades. The AW warming has been uneven in time; a local ∼1°C maximum was observed in the mid-1990s, followed by an intervening minimum and an additional warming that culminated in 2007 with temperatures higher than in the 1990s by 0.24°C. Relative to climatology from all data prior to 1999, the most extreme 2007 temperature anomalies of up to 1°C and higher were observed in the Eurasian and Makarov Basins. The AW warming was associated with a substantial (up to 75–90 m) shoaling of the upper AW boundary in the central Arctic Ocean and weakening of the Eurasian Basin upper-ocean stratification. Taken together, these observations suggest that the changes in the Eurasian Basin facilitated greater upward transfer of AW heat to the ocean surface layer. Available limited observations and results from a 1D ocean column model support this surmised upward spread of AW heat through the Eurasian Basin halocline. Experiments with a 3D coupled ice–ocean model in turn suggest a loss of 28–35 cm of ice thickness after ∼50 yr in response to the 0.5 W m−2 increase in AW ocean heat flux suggested by the 1D model. This amount of thinning is comparable to the 29 cm of ice thickness loss due to local atmospheric thermodynamic forcing estimated from observations of fast-ice thickness decline. The implication is that AW warming helped precondition the polar ice cap for the extreme ice loss observed in recent years.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Oceanography

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