Abstract
Abstract. Across the long-term (∼43-year) satellite record,
Antarctic sea ice extent shows a small overall circumpolar increase,
resulting from opposing regional sea ice concentration anomalies. Running
short-term samples of the same sea ice concentration data, however, show
that the long-term trend pattern is dominated by the earliest years of the
satellite record. Compensating regional anomalies diminish over time, and in
the most recent decade, these tend towards spatial homogeneity instead.
Running 30-year trends show the regional pattern of sea ice behaviour
reversing over time; while in some regions, trend patterns abruptly shift in
line with the record anomalous sea ice behaviour of recent years, in other
regions a steady change predates these record anomalies. The shifting trend
patterns in many regions are co-located with enhanced north–south flow due
to an increasingly wave-3-like structure of the Southern Annular Mode. Sea
surface temperature anomalies also shift from a circumpolar cooling to a
regional pattern that resembles the increasingly asymmetric structure of the
Southern Annular Mode, with warming in regions of previously increasing sea
ice such as the Ross Sea.
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Water Science and Technology
Cited by
12 articles.
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