scholarly journals The Influence of Sea Ice on Ocean Heat Uptake in Response to Increasing CO2

2006 ◽  
Vol 19 (11) ◽  
pp. 2437-2450 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. M. Bitz ◽  
P. R. Gent ◽  
R. A. Woodgate ◽  
M. M. Holland ◽  
R. Lindsay

Abstract Two significant changes in ocean heat uptake that occur in the vicinity of sea ice cover in response to increasing CO2 are investigated with Community Climate System Model version 3 (CCSM3): a deep warming below ∼500 m and extending down several kilometers in the Southern Ocean and warming in a ∼200-m layer just below the surface in the Arctic Ocean. Ocean heat uptake caused by sea ice retreat is isolated by running the model with the sea ice albedo reduced artificially alone. This integration has a climate response with strong ocean heat uptake in the Southern Ocean and modest ocean heat uptake in the subsurface Arctic Ocean. The Arctic Ocean warming results from enhanced ocean heat transport from the northern North Atlantic. At the time of CO2 doubling, about 1/3 of the heat transport anomaly results from advection of anomalously warm water and 2/3 results from strengthened inflow. At the same time the overturning circulation is strengthened in the northern North Atlantic and Arctic Oceans. Wind stress changes cannot explain the circulation changes, which instead appear related to strengthened convection along the Siberian shelves. Deep ocean warming in the Southern Ocean is initiated by weakened convection, which is mainly a result of surface freshening through altered sea ice and ocean freshwater transport. Below about 500 m, changes in convection reduce the vertical and meridional temperature gradients in the Southern Ocean, which significantly reduce isopycnal diffusion of heat upward around Antarctica. The geometry of the sea ice cover and its influence on convection have a strong influence on ocean temperature gradients, making sea ice an important player in deep ocean heat uptake in the Southern Ocean.

2022 ◽  
pp. 1-59
Author(s):  
Paul J. Kushner ◽  
Russell Blackport ◽  
Kelly E. McCusker ◽  
Thomas Oudar ◽  
Lantao Sun ◽  
...  

Abstract Analyzing a multi-model ensemble of coupled climate model simulations forced with Arctic sea-ice loss using a two-parameter pattern-scaling technique to remove the cross-coupling between low- and high-latitude responses, the sensitivity to high-latitude sea-ice loss is isolated and contrasted to the sensitivity to low-latitude warming. In spite of some differences in experimental design, the Northern Hemisphere near-surface atmospheric sensitivity to sea-ice loss is found to be robust across models in the cold season; however, a larger inter-model spread is found at the surface in boreal summer, and in the free tropospheric circulation. In contrast, the sensitivity to low-latitude warming is most robust in the free troposphere and in the warm season, with more inter-model spread in the surface ocean and surface heat flux over the Northern Hemisphere. The robust signals associated with sea-ice loss include upward turbulent and longwave heat fluxes where sea-ice is lost, warming and freshening of the Arctic ocean, warming of the eastern North Pacific relative to the western North Pacific with upward turbulent heat fluxes in the Kuroshio extension, and salinification of the shallow shelf seas of the Arctic Ocean alongside freshening in the subpolar North Atlantic. In contrast, the robust signals associated with low-latitude warming include intensified ocean warming and upward latent heat fluxes near the western boundary currents, freshening of the Pacific Ocean, salinification of the North Atlantic, and downward sensible and longwave fluxes over the ocean.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Randelle M. Bundy ◽  
Alessandro Tagliabue ◽  
Nicholas J. Hawco ◽  
Peter L. Morton ◽  
Benjamin S. Twining ◽  
...  

Abstract. Cobalt (Co) is an important bioactive trace metal that can limit or co-limit phytoplankton growth in many regions of the ocean. Total dissolved and labile Co measurements in the Canadian sector of the Arctic Ocean during U.S. GEOTRACES Arctic expedition (GN01) and the Canadian International Polar Year-GEOTRACES expedition (GIPY14) revealed a dynamic biogeochemical cycle for Co in this basin. The major sources of Co in the Arctic were from shelf regions and rivers, with only minimal contributions from other freshwater sources (sea ice, snow) and aeolian deposition. The most striking feature was the extremely high concentrations of dissolved Co in the upper 100 m, with concentrations routinely exceeding 800 pmol L−1 over the shelf regions. This plume of high Co persisted throughout the Arctic basin and extended to the North Pole, where sources of Co shifted from primarily shelf-derived to riverine, as freshwater from Arctic rivers was entrained in the Transpolar Drift. Dissolved Co was also strongly organically-complexed in the Arctic, ranging from 70–100 % complexed in the surface and deep ocean, respectively. Deep water concentrations of dissolved Co were remarkably consistent throughout the basin (~ 55 pmol L−1), with concentrations reflecting those of deep Atlantic water and deep ocean scavenging of dissolved Co. A biogeochemical model of Co cycling was used to support the hypothesis that the majority of the high surface Co in the Arctic was emanating from the shelf. The model showed that the high concentrations of Co observed along the transect were due to the large shelf area of the Arctic, as well as dampened scavenging of Co by manganese (Mn)-oxidizing bacteria due to the lower temperatures. The majority of this scavenging appears to have occurred in the upper 200 m, with minimal additional scavenging below this depth. Preliminary evidence suggests that both dissolved and labile Co are increasing over time on the Arctic shelf, and the elevated surface concentrations of Co likely leads to a net flux of Co out of the Arctic, with implications for downstream biological uptake of Co in the North Atlantic and elevated Co in North Atlantic Deep Water. Understanding the current distributions of Co in the Arctic will be important for constraining changes to Co inputs resulting from regional intensification of freshwater fluxes from ice and permafrost melt in response to ongoing climate change.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yarisbel Garcia Quintana ◽  
Paul G. Myers ◽  
Kent Moore

<p>Nares Strait, between Greenland and Ellesmere Island, is one of the main pathways connecting the Arctic Ocean to the North Atlantic. The multi-year sea ice that is transported through the strait plays an important role in the mass balance of Arctic sea-ice as well as influencing the climate of the North Atlantic region. This transport is modulated by the formation of ice arches that form at the southern and northern of the strait.  The arches also play an important role in the maintenance of the North Water Polynya (NOW) that forms at the southern end of the strait. The NOW is one of the largest and most productive of Arctic polynyas. Given its significance, we use an eddy-permitting regional configuration of the Nucleus for European Modelling of the Ocean (NEMO) to explore sea-ice variability along Nares Strait, from 2002 to 2019. The model is coupled with the Louvain-la-Neuve (LIM2) sea ice thermodynamic and dynamic numerical model and is forced by the Canadian Meteorological Centre’s Global Deterministic Prediction System Reforecasts.</p><p>We use the model to explore the variability in ocean and sea ice characteristics along Nares Strait. The positive and negative degree days, measures of ice decay and growth, along the strait are consistent with the warming that the region is experiencing. Sea-ice production/decay did not show any significant change other than an enhanced decay during the summers of 2017-1019. Sea-ice thickness on the other hand has decreased significantly since 2007. This decrease has been more pronounced along the northern (north of Kane Basin) portion of the strait. What is more, ocean model data indicates that since 2007 the northern Nares Strait upper 100m layer has become fresher, indicating an increase in the freshwater export out of the Arctic Ocean and through the strait. The southern portion of the strait, on the other hand, has become warmer and saltier, which would be consistent with an influx of Irminger Water as proposed by previous modelling results. These changes could impact the formation and stability of the ice arch and hence the cessation of ice transport down Nares Strait as well as contributing to changes in the characteristics of the NOW. </p>


2012 ◽  
Vol 8 (6) ◽  
pp. 1012-1015 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Berge ◽  
Ø. Varpe ◽  
M. A. Moline ◽  
A. Wold ◽  
P. E. Renaud ◽  
...  

Recent studies predict that the Arctic Ocean will have ice-free summers within the next 30 years. This poses a significant challenge for the marine organisms associated with the Arctic sea ice, such as marine mammals and, not least, the ice-associated crustaceans generally considered to spend their entire life on the underside of the Arctic sea ice. Based upon unique samples collected within the Arctic Ocean during the polar night, we provide a new conceptual understanding of an intimate connection between these under-ice crustaceans and the deep Arctic Ocean currents. We suggest that downwards vertical migrations, followed by polewards transport in deep ocean currents, are an adaptive trait of ice fauna that both increases survival during ice-free periods of the year and enables re-colonization of sea ice when they ascend within the Arctic Ocean. From an evolutionary perspective, this may have been an adaptation allowing success in a seasonally ice-covered Arctic. Our findings may ultimately change the perception of ice fauna as a biota imminently threatened by the predicted disappearance of perennial sea ice.


2018 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 433-452 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alek A. Petty ◽  
Julienne C. Stroeve ◽  
Paul R. Holland ◽  
Linette N. Boisvert ◽  
Angela C. Bliss ◽  
...  

Abstract. The Arctic sea ice cover of 2016 was highly noteworthy, as it featured record low monthly sea ice extents at the start of the year but a summer (September) extent that was higher than expected by most seasonal forecasts. Here we explore the 2016 Arctic sea ice state in terms of its monthly sea ice cover, placing this in the context of the sea ice conditions observed since 2000. We demonstrate the sensitivity of monthly Arctic sea ice extent and area estimates, in terms of their magnitude and annual rankings, to the ice concentration input data (using two widely used datasets) and to the averaging methodology used to convert concentration to extent (daily or monthly extent calculations). We use estimates of sea ice area over sea ice extent to analyse the relative “compactness” of the Arctic sea ice cover, highlighting anomalously low compactness in the summer of 2016 which contributed to the higher-than-expected September ice extent. Two cyclones that entered the Arctic Ocean during August appear to have driven this low-concentration/compactness ice cover but were not sufficient to cause more widespread melt-out and a new record-low September ice extent. We use concentration budgets to explore the regions and processes (thermodynamics/dynamics) contributing to the monthly 2016 extent/area estimates highlighting, amongst other things, rapid ice intensification across the central eastern Arctic through September. Two different products show significant early melt onset across the Arctic Ocean in 2016, including record-early melt onset in the North Atlantic sector of the Arctic. Our results also show record-late 2016 freeze-up in the central Arctic, North Atlantic and the Alaskan Arctic sector in particular, associated with strong sea surface temperature anomalies that appeared shortly after the 2016 minimum (October onwards). We explore the implications of this low summer ice compactness for seasonal forecasting, suggesting that sea ice area could be a more reliable metric to forecast in this more seasonal, “New Arctic”, sea ice regime.


2020 ◽  
Vol 17 (19) ◽  
pp. 4745-4767
Author(s):  
Randelle M. Bundy ◽  
Alessandro Tagliabue ◽  
Nicholas J. Hawco ◽  
Peter L. Morton ◽  
Benjamin S. Twining ◽  
...  

Abstract. Cobalt (Co) is an important bioactive trace metal that is the metal cofactor in cobalamin (vitamin B12) which can limit or co-limit phytoplankton growth in many regions of the ocean. Total dissolved and labile Co measurements in the Canadian sector of the Arctic Ocean during the U.S. GEOTRACES Arctic expedition (GN01) and the Canadian International Polar Year GEOTRACES expedition (GIPY14) revealed a dynamic biogeochemical cycle for Co in this basin. The major sources of Co in the Arctic were from shelf regions and rivers, with only minimal contributions from other freshwater sources (sea ice, snow) and eolian deposition. The most striking feature was the extremely high concentrations of dissolved Co in the upper 100 m, with concentrations routinely exceeding 800 pmol L−1 over the shelf regions. This plume of high Co persisted throughout the Arctic basin and extended to the North Pole, where sources of Co shifted from primarily shelf-derived to riverine, as freshwater from Arctic rivers was entrained in the Transpolar Drift. Dissolved Co was also strongly organically complexed in the Arctic, ranging from 70 % to 100 % complexed in the surface and deep ocean, respectively. Deep-water concentrations of dissolved Co were remarkably consistent throughout the basin (∼55 pmol L−1), with concentrations reflecting those of deep Atlantic water and deep-ocean scavenging of dissolved Co. A biogeochemical model of Co cycling was used to support the hypothesis that the majority of the high surface Co in the Arctic was emanating from the shelf. The model showed that the high concentrations of Co observed were due to the large shelf area of the Arctic, as well as to dampened scavenging of Co by manganese-oxidizing (Mn-oxidizing) bacteria due to the lower temperatures. The majority of this scavenging appears to have occurred in the upper 200 m, with minimal additional scavenging below this depth. Evidence suggests that both dissolved Co (dCo) and labile Co (LCo) are increasing over time on the Arctic shelf, and these limited temporal results are consistent with other tracers in the Arctic. These elevated surface concentrations of Co likely lead to a net flux of Co out of the Arctic, with implications for downstream biological uptake of Co in the North Atlantic and elevated Co in North Atlantic Deep Water. Understanding the current distributions of Co in the Arctic will be important for constraining changes to Co inputs resulting from regional intensification of freshwater fluxes from ice and permafrost melt in response to ongoing climate change.


1990 ◽  
Vol 14 ◽  
pp. 328-328 ◽  
Author(s):  
Knut Aagaard

Rapid melting of continental ice during deglaciations has been hypothesized to shift the thermohaline circulation of the world ocean to a mode radically different from the one dominated by the North Atlantic, such as operates today. This scenario has been referred to as the halocline catastrophe. We consider here the freezing, transport, and melting of sea ice in the North Atlantic sector as a possible modern analog to such events.The rejection of salt during the freezing and subsequent development of sea ice results, by early summer, in ice with only 5–10% of its original salt content. Since sea ice several meters thick is typically formed annually in the polar regions, the distillation rates from freezing are fully comparable to those from evaporation in such highly evaporative basins as the Red Sea. If the ice is subsequently exported from its production area, then freezing and melting are the oceanic equivalent of the hydrologic cycle. In the Arctic, the major ice outflow from the 107 km2 of the Polar Basin occurs east of Greenland, where the exodus represents a fresh-water transport of at least 2800 km3 a−1. This is a discharge more than twice that of North America’s four largest rivers combined.The fresh water can subsequently be traced around the subpolar gyre of the North Atlantic, on its way transferring small but significant amounts of buoyancy into the interior convective gyres, e.g. in the Greenland Sea. The convection which occurs in these gyres under present climatic conditions makes them major ventilation and water mass formation sites for the deep world ocean, but because the density of sea water at constant pressure and low temperature is almost solely dependent on salinity, the convection is extremely sensitive to changes in the freshwater supply to the gyres. Small variations in the supply will be transferred into the deep ocean by convection, where they will be manifested by a cooling and freshening, such as has recently been observed in the deep North Atlantic. However, if the surface layers are freshened too much, cooling even to the freezing point will be insufficient to initiate convection. Instead, the convective gyres will be capped by a fresh-water lid, essentially what has been proposed in the halocline catastrophe scenarios. During such events, sea ice will form in the gyres, sometimes with disastrous consequences, as occurred north of Iceland during the late 1960s when, during the extreme years of 1965 and 1968, the entire north and east coasts of Iceland were enveloped by sea ice; at the same time, renewal to the north of the deep ocean waters diminished or ceased.We suggest that the present-day Greenland and Iceland seas, and probably also the Labrador Sea, are rather delicately poised with respect to their ability to sustain convection, and that we have in fact during the past several decades seen a small-scale analog to the halocline catastrophe proposed for past deglaciations. A major difference is that the present situation does not require dramatic increases in fresh-water flux to effect a capping of the convection; nor does it depend on deglaciation. Rather, very modest changes in the disposition of the fresh water presently carried by the East Greenland Current can alter or stop the convection; and the principal source of fresh water is sea ice, rather than glacial ice. The essence of the present situation is that the large fresh-water output from the Arctic Ocean, which is the distillate of freezing, passes perilously close to the very weakly stratified convective gyres; and that the stratification in these gyres is easily perturbed, either by variations in the discharge from the Arctic Ocean or by leaks or recirculation from the boundary current.


1990 ◽  
Vol 14 ◽  
pp. 328
Author(s):  
Knut Aagaard

Rapid melting of continental ice during deglaciations has been hypothesized to shift the thermohaline circulation of the world ocean to a mode radically different from the one dominated by the North Atlantic, such as operates today. This scenario has been referred to as the halocline catastrophe. We consider here the freezing, transport, and melting of sea ice in the North Atlantic sector as a possible modern analog to such events. The rejection of salt during the freezing and subsequent development of sea ice results, by early summer, in ice with only 5–10% of its original salt content. Since sea ice several meters thick is typically formed annually in the polar regions, the distillation rates from freezing are fully comparable to those from evaporation in such highly evaporative basins as the Red Sea. If the ice is subsequently exported from its production area, then freezing and melting are the oceanic equivalent of the hydrologic cycle. In the Arctic, the major ice outflow from the 107 km2 of the Polar Basin occurs east of Greenland, where the exodus represents a fresh-water transport of at least 2800 km3 a−1. This is a discharge more than twice that of North America’s four largest rivers combined. The fresh water can subsequently be traced around the subpolar gyre of the North Atlantic, on its way transferring small but significant amounts of buoyancy into the interior convective gyres, e.g. in the Greenland Sea. The convection which occurs in these gyres under present climatic conditions makes them major ventilation and water mass formation sites for the deep world ocean, but because the density of sea water at constant pressure and low temperature is almost solely dependent on salinity, the convection is extremely sensitive to changes in the freshwater supply to the gyres. Small variations in the supply will be transferred into the deep ocean by convection, where they will be manifested by a cooling and freshening, such as has recently been observed in the deep North Atlantic. However, if the surface layers are freshened too much, cooling even to the freezing point will be insufficient to initiate convection. Instead, the convective gyres will be capped by a fresh-water lid, essentially what has been proposed in the halocline catastrophe scenarios. During such events, sea ice will form in the gyres, sometimes with disastrous consequences, as occurred north of Iceland during the late 1960s when, during the extreme years of 1965 and 1968, the entire north and east coasts of Iceland were enveloped by sea ice; at the same time, renewal to the north of the deep ocean waters diminished or ceased. We suggest that the present-day Greenland and Iceland seas, and probably also the Labrador Sea, are rather delicately poised with respect to their ability to sustain convection, and that we have in fact during the past several decades seen a small-scale analog to the halocline catastrophe proposed for past deglaciations. A major difference is that the present situation does not require dramatic increases in fresh-water flux to effect a capping of the convection; nor does it depend on deglaciation. Rather, very modest changes in the disposition of the fresh water presently carried by the East Greenland Current can alter or stop the convection; and the principal source of fresh water is sea ice, rather than glacial ice. The essence of the present situation is that the large fresh-water output from the Arctic Ocean, which is the distillate of freezing, passes perilously close to the very weakly stratified convective gyres; and that the stratification in these gyres is easily perturbed, either by variations in the discharge from the Arctic Ocean or by leaks or recirculation from the boundary current.


2013 ◽  
Vol 79 ◽  
pp. 111-121 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anne de Vernal ◽  
Claude Hillaire-Marcel ◽  
André Rochon ◽  
Bianca Fréchette ◽  
Maryse Henry ◽  
...  

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