Interannual Variability in Summer Sea Ice Minimum, Coastal Polynyas and Bottom Water Formation In the Weddell Sea

Author(s):  
Josefino C. Comiso ◽  
Arnold L. Gordon
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cara Nissen ◽  
Ralph Timmermann ◽  
Mario Hoppema ◽  
Judith Hauck

<p>Deep and bottom water formation regions have long been recognized to be efficient vectors for carbon transfer to depth, leading to carbon sequestration on time scales of centuries or more. Precursors of Antarctic Bottom Water (AABW) are formed on the Weddell Sea continental shelf as a consequence of buoyancy loss of surface waters at the ice-ocean or atmosphere-ocean interface, which suggests that any change in water mass transformation rates in this area affects global carbon cycling and hence climate. Many of the models previously used to assess AABW formation in present and future climates contained only crude representations of ocean-ice shelf interaction. Numerical simulations often featured spurious deep convection in the open ocean, and changes in carbon sequestration have not yet been assessed at all. Here, we present results from the global model FESOM-REcoM, which was run on a mesh with elevated grid resolution in the Weddell Sea and which includes an explicit representation of sea ice and ice shelves. Forcing this model with ssp585 scenario output from the AWI Climate Model, we assess changes over the 21<sup>st</sup> century in the formation and northward export of dense waters and the associated carbon fluxes within and out of the Weddell Sea. We find that the northward transport of dense deep waters (σ<sub>2</sub>>37.2 kg m<sup>-3</sup> below 2000 m) across the SR4 transect, which connects the tip of the Antarctic Peninsula with the eastern Weddell Sea, declines from 4 Sv to 2.9 Sv by the year 2100. Concurrently, despite the simulated continuous increase in surface ocean CO<sub>2</sub> uptake in the Weddell Sea over the 21<sup>st</sup> century, the carbon transported northward with dense deep waters declines from 3.5 Pg C yr<sup>-1</sup> to 2.5 Pg C yr<sup>-1</sup>, demonstrating the dominant role of dense water formation rates for carbon sequestration. Using the water mass transformation framework, we find that south of SR4, the formation of downwelling dense waters declines from 3.5 Sv in the 1990s to 1.6 Sv in the 2090s, a direct result of the 18% lower sea-ice formation in the area, the increased presence of modified Warm Deep Water on the continental shelf, and 50% higher ice shelf basal melt rates. Given that the reduced formation of downwelling water masses additionally occurs at lighter densities in FESOM-REcoM in the 2090s, this will directly impact the depth at which any additional oceanic carbon uptake is stored, with consequences for long-term carbon sequestration.</p>


2017 ◽  
Vol 32 (3) ◽  
pp. 304-317 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaoxia Huang ◽  
Michael Stärz ◽  
Karsten Gohl ◽  
Gregor Knorr ◽  
Gerrit Lohmann

Author(s):  
N. N. Antipov ◽  
A. V. Klepikov

The results of field studies of the processes of Antarctic Bottom Water formation conducted in the period from 2004 to 2016 in the Prydz Bay of the Commonwealth Sea is discussed. During this period the oceanographic observations along the 70° E section, crossing the shelf and the continental slope, were repeated nine times. In this area in the austral summer of 2004 during the AARI expedition on the r/v “Akademik Fedorov” the process of formation of bottom water has been recorded for the first time. A further study of the structure and characteristics of water masses on this section and in the adjacent area confirmed the regularity of these processes during the summer period. At the same time, a significant interannual variability of the structure, characteristics, and mechanisms of distribution of the main water masses in the section shelf, deep and bottom waters — was found. For the first time, detailed information on the bottom topography of the ocean in the vicinity of this section made it possible to show the determining role of bottom topography features in the distribution of newly formed bottom water along the continental slope. The tendency of increasing of the volume of bottom water formed in the Prydz Bay in recent years is revealed, which is associated with the intensification of the basal melting of the ice shelf leading to an increase in the volume of the formation of supercooled Shelf Water, the most important component in the formation of bottom water.


2008 ◽  
Vol 55 (8-9) ◽  
pp. 1098-1116 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oliver Huhn ◽  
Hartmut H. Hellmer ◽  
Monika Rhein ◽  
Christian Rodehacke ◽  
Wolfgang Roether ◽  
...  

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