Seasonal prediction and predictability of regional Antarctic sea ice

Author:

Bushuk Mitchell1,Winton Michael2,Haumann F. Alexander3,Delworth Thomas2,Lu Feiyu3,Zhang Yongfei3,Jia Liwei1,Zhang Liping1,Cooke William2,Harrison Matthew2,Hurlin Bill2,Johnson Nathaniel C.2,Kapnick Sarah2,McHugh Colleen4,Murakami Hiroyuki1,Rosati Anthony1,Tseng Kai-Chih3,Wittenberg Andrew T.2,Yang Xiaosong2,Zeng Fanrong2

Affiliation:

1. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration/Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory, Princeton, New Jersey; University Corporation for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, Colorado

2. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration/Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory, Princeton, New Jersey

3. Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences Program, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey

4. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration/Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory, Princeton, New Jersey; SAIC, Science Applications International Corporation, Reston, VA

Abstract

AbstractCompared to the Arctic, seasonal predictions of Antarctic sea ice have received relatively little attention. In this work, we utilize three coupled dynamical prediction systems developed at the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory to assess the seasonal prediction skill and predictability of Antarctic sea ice. These systems, based on the FLOR, SPEAR_LO, and SPEAR_MED dynamical models, differ in their coupled model components, initialization techniques, atmospheric resolution, and model biases. Using suites of retrospective initialized seasonal predictions spanning 1992–2018, we investigate the role of these factors in determining Antarctic sea ice prediction skill and examine the mechanisms of regional sea ice predictability. We find that each system is capable of skillfully predicting regional Antarctic sea ice extent (SIE) with skill that exceeds a persistence forecast. Winter SIE is skillfully predicted 11 months in advance in the Weddell, Amundsen and Bellingshausen, Indian, and West Pacific sectors, whereas winter skill is notably lower in the Ross sector. Zonally advected upper ocean heat content anomalies are found to provide the crucial source of prediction skill for the winter sea ice edge position. The recently-developed SPEAR systems are more skillful than FLOR for summer sea ice predictions, owing to improvements in sea ice concentration and sea ice thickness initialization. Summer Weddell SIE is skillfully predicted up to 9 months in advance in SPEAR_MED, due to the persistence and drift of initialized sea ice thickness anomalies from the previous winter. Overall, these results suggest a promising potential for providing operational Antarctic sea ice predictions on seasonal timescales.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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