scholarly journals Wind-driven interannual variability of sea ice algal production in the western Arctic Chukchi Borderland

2015 ◽  
Vol 12 (20) ◽  
pp. 6147-6168 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Watanabe ◽  
J. Onodera ◽  
N. Harada ◽  
M. N. Aita ◽  
A. Ishida ◽  
...  

Abstract. Seasonal and interannual variability in the biogenic particle sinking flux was recorded using multi-year bottom-tethered sediment trap mooring systems in the Northwind Abyssal Plain (Station NAP: 75° N, 162° W, 1975 m water depth) of the western Arctic Chukchi Borderland. Trapped particle flux at a median depth of 184 m had an obvious peak and dominance of sea ice-related diatom assemblages in August 2011. The observed particle flux was considerably suppressed throughout summer 2012. In the present study, the response of ice algal production and biomass to wind-driven changes in the physical environment was addressed using a pan-Arctic sea ice–ocean modeling approach. A sea ice ecosystem with ice algae was newly incorporated into the lower-trophic marine ecosystem model, which was previously coupled with a high-resolution (i.e., 5 km horizontal grid size) sea ice–ocean general circulation model. Seasonal model experiments covering 2-year mooring periods indicated that primary productivity of ice algae around the Chukchi Borderland depended on basin-scale wind patterns via various processes. Easterly winds in the southern part of a distinct Beaufort High supplied nutrient-rich water for euphotic zones of the NAP region via both surface Ekman transport of Chukchi shelf water and vertical turbulent mixing with underlying nutricline water in 2011. In contrast, northwesterly winds flowing in the northern part of an extended Siberian High transported oligotrophic water within the Beaufort Gyre circulation toward the NAP region in 2012. The modeled ice algal biomass during summer reflected the differences in nutrient distribution. The modeled sinking flux of particulate organic nitrogen (PON) was comparable with the time series obtained from sediment trap data in summer 2011. In contrast, lateral advection of ice algal patches of shelf origin during a great cyclone event may have caused a modeled PON flux bias in 2012. Sensitivity experiments revealed several uncertainties of model configurations of ice algal productivity, particle sinking speed, and grazing activities. Extending the year-long measurements is expected to help illustrate the more general features of ice-related biological processes in the Arctic Ocean.

2015 ◽  
Vol 12 (10) ◽  
pp. 7739-7781
Author(s):  
E. Watanabe ◽  
J. Onodera ◽  
N. Harada ◽  
M. N. Aita ◽  
A. Ishida ◽  
...  

Abstract. Seasonal and interannual variability in sinking flux of biogenic particles was reported by the multi-year bottom-tethered sediment trap measurements in the Northwind Abyssal Plain (Station NAP: 75° N, 162° W, 1975 m water depth) of the western Arctic Chukchi Borderland. Whereas the trapped particle flux had an obvious peak with the dominance of sea ice-related diatom valve in August 2011, the observed particle flux was considerably suppressed throughout the summer season in 2012. In the present study, response of ice algal production and biomass to wind-driven changes in physical environments was addressed using a pan-Arctic sea ice–ocean modeling approach. Sea ice ecosystem with ice algae was newly incorporated into the lower-trophic marine ecosystem model, which was previously coupled with a high-resolution (i.e., horizontal grid size of 5 km) ocean general circulation model. Seasonal experiments covering two year-long mooring periods indicated that primary productivity of ice algae around the Chukchi Borderland depended on basin-scale wind pattern through various processes. Easterly wind in the southern part of distinct Beaufort High supplied high abundance of nutrient for euphotic zones of the NAP region via both surface Ekman transport of Chukchi shelf water and vertical turbulent mixing with underlying nutricline water as in 2011. In contrast, northwesterly wind flowing in the northern part of extended Siberian High transported oligotrophic water within the Beaufort Gyre circulation toward the NAP region as in 2012. The modeled ice algal biomass during the summer season certainly reflected the differences in nutrient distribution. The sinking flux of Particulate Organic Nitrogen (PON) was comparable with the time series obtained from the sediment trap data in summer 2011. On the other hand, lateral advection of shelf-origin ice algal patch during a great cyclone event might have caused a model bias on the PON flux in 2012. The extension of year-long measurements is expected to help the illustration of more general features on the Arctic marine biological pump.


Author(s):  
Tsubasa Kodaira ◽  
Takuji Waseda ◽  
Takehiko Nose ◽  
Jun Inoue ◽  
Kazutoshi Sato ◽  
...  

Abstract Surface ocean waves are one of the potential processes that influence on the Arctic sea-ice extent. A better understanding of the generation, propagation, and attenuation of ocean waves under the sea ice is necessary to discuss the future Arctic climate change. We deployed two drifting wave buoys in the marginal ice zone in the western Arctic. Since the surface wave observation in the marginal ice zone is rare, the obtained data are useful for validation of the numerical modeling of the surface waves under the sea ice. The first buoy was deployed in the pancake-ice covered area and the second one in the open ocean. The distance between the two buoys at the deployment was about 40km, and the second buoy was deployed approximately 5 hours after the first deployment. The comparison of the wave bulk statistic measured by the two buoys shows the wave transformation under the sea ice. In general, the significant wave height decreases, and the mean wave periods increase by the presence of the sea ice.


Nature ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 425 (6961) ◽  
pp. 947-950 ◽  
Author(s):  
Seymour Laxon ◽  
Neil Peacock ◽  
Doug Smith

2015 ◽  
Vol 28 (15) ◽  
pp. 6281-6296 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hyo-Seok Park ◽  
Sukyoung Lee ◽  
Yu Kosaka ◽  
Seok-Woo Son ◽  
Sang-Woo Kim

Abstract The Arctic summer sea ice area has been rapidly decreasing in recent decades. In addition to this trend, substantial interannual variability is present, as is highlighted by the recovery in sea ice area in 2013 following the record minimum in 2012. This interannual variability of the Arctic summer sea ice area has been attributed to the springtime weather disturbances. Here, by utilizing reanalysis- and satellite-based sea ice data, this study shows that summers with unusually small sea ice area are preceded by winters with anomalously strong downward longwave radiation over the Eurasian sector of the Arctic Ocean. This anomalous wintertime radiative forcing at the surface is up to 10–15 W m−2, which is about twice as strong than that during the spring. During the same winters, the poleward moisture and warm-air intrusions into the Eurasian sector of the Arctic Ocean are anomalously strong and the resulting moisture convergence field closely resembles positive anomalies in column-integrated water vapor and tropospheric temperature. Climate model simulations support the above-mentioned findings and further show that the anomalously strong wintertime radiative forcing can decrease sea ice thickness over wide areas of the Arctic Ocean, especially over the Eurasian sector. During the winters preceding the anomalously small summer sea ice area, the upper ocean of the model is anomalously warm over the Barents Sea, indicating that the upper-ocean heat content contributes to winter sea ice thinning. Finally, mass divergence by ice drift in the preceding winter and spring contributes to the thinning of sea ice over the East Siberian and Chukchi Seas, where radiative forcing and upper-ocean heat content anomalies are relatively weak.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Meghana Amarnath Rajanahally

<p>Sea ice algal communities play a very significant role in primary production in the Southern Ocean, being the only source of fixed carbon for all other life in this habitat and contributing up to 22% of Antarctic primary production in ice-covered regions. Therefore it is important to understand how these organisms adapt to this highly variable and harsh environment Previous studies have described their acclimation to changes in environmental conditions but we still do not understand the physiological basis of these responses. This study examines the effects of varying levels of photosynthetically active radiation (PAR), ultraviolet-B (UV-B) radiation and temperature on bottom ice algal communities and individual algal species using pulse-amplitude modulation (PAM) fluorometry, the production of mycosporine-like amino acids (MAAs) and superoxide dismutase (SOD) activity.  The experiments conducted in this thesis show that bottom ice algae are capable of acclimating to the higher levels of PAR and temperature that would likely be experienced during sea ice melt As temperature was increased past a threshold temperature of thylakoid integrity, it became the major stressor, causing decreases in photosynthetic yield at around 14°C, even at ambient PAR exposure. Similarly, a thylakoid integrity experiment independently suggested that the critical temperature for the onset of thylakoid damage was 14°C, which correlated well to the 14°C incubation observations, although this is a temperature that sea ice algae are unlikely to encounter in the polar regions.  It is likely that sea ice algae produce additional MAAs, known to be cellular sunscreens, in response to increasing levels of UV-B, allowing tolerance of this stressor. This is the first study in the marine environment to demonstrate that algae can produce MAAs in response to increasing PAR and temperature, even in the absence of UV-B, indicating that MAAs may be more than just sunscreen compounds. The levels of UV-B used in this study were representative of those likely to be faced by the algae during sea ice melt. With increasing temperature, the algae maintained photosynthetic yield and decreased MAA production, implying that the rise in temperature aids the algae with another element of photoprotection such as enzymatic repair. As these results contrasted with previous studies of bottom ice algae that showed no additional MAA production in response to higher levels of PAR and UV-B, it was hypothesized that this difference was attributed to variations in species composition that could modify the productivity of the community.  The short-term effects of increasing PAR and UV -B on three unialgal cultures of Thalassiosira sp., Fragilariopsis sp. (from the Ross Sea), and Chaetoceros sp. (from the Antarctic Peninsula) were therefore examined. In unialgal culture studies, these three algal species showed higher tolerance to PAR and UV-B compared to that of the mixed culture of bottom ice algae, although there remained species-specific variation. Both Ross Sea species showed increasing photosynthetic yield with increasing PAR and UV-B exposure, but there was a difference in the tolerance shown by the two species. Thalassiosira sp. tolerated higher PAR and lower UV-B and Fragilariopsis tolerated lower PAR and higher UV-B. Both species produced MAAs in response to these stressors, indicating that these compounds allowed the algae to decrease levels of photoinhibition.  In comparison to the Ross Sea, the Antarctic Peninsula is an area of higher environmental variability and change, meaning that the species in both regions could have varying acclimatory capabilities. Although data from three species alone cannot conclusively demonstrate that algae from different regions have different acclimatory capabilities, they do illustrate considerable variation between species. Chaetoceros sp. from the Antarctic Peninsula region showed a higher tolerance to PAR and UV-B compared to the Ross Sea species. The former species showed an increase in photosynthetic yield in response to increasing PAR and this was accompanied by a lack of MAA production in response to the experimental levels of PAR, which indicates that the two Ross Sea species have a higher tolerance to PAR compared to the Antarctic Peninsula species. Chaetoceros sp. from the Antarctic Peninsula showed an increase in photosynthetic yield in response to high UV-B exposures, accompanied by MAA production and had no signs of photoinhibition.  A further experiment was conducted to address the weaknesses in the initial methodologies, particularly related to control conditions in the short-term experiments. Common species from the Ross Sea, Antarctic Peninsula and the Arctic were exposed to a combination of increased PAR and UV-B over a period of seven days to compare acclimatory abilities using PAM and SOD activity. Thalassiosira antarctica from the Ross Sea, Chaetoceros socialis from the Antarctic Peninsula and C. socialis from the Arctic showed no significant change in quantum yield over the incubation period. This further highlights the importance of running experiments with compounding factors, as an increase in one factor could alleviate the negative effect of the other. There was an unexpected lack of change in SOD activity for all species under all treatments applied, which could indicate that the levels of PAR and UV-B used were not high enough to cause stress in these species. This work also points to the need to assay for various antioxidants, as algae are known to rely on a network of antioxidants in their defence against environmental stresses.  The data from this thesis clarify the influence of PAR, UV-B and temperature on sea ice algae, and could help better evaluate the fate of these communities under various climate change scenarios. This study has made important steps towards understanding the acclimatory abilities of sea ice algae. Increasing knowledge of sea ice algal physiology, particularly of photosynthetic health in response to environmental change, will help improve predictions of productivity in the most productive ocean on this planet. Algal tolerance to increasing PAR, UV-B and temperature is remarkable, and this ability could be crucial in the context of future climate change. The productivity of these autotrophic microorganisms strongly influences secondary production that ties their fate to that of all other life in the Southern Ocean.</p>


2020 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giulia Castellani ◽  
Gaëlle Veyssiere ◽  
Frank Kauker ◽  
Michael Karcher ◽  
Julienne Stroeve ◽  
...  

When the air is very cold, water at the surface of the ocean freezes, forming sea ice. Parts of the Arctic Ocean are covered by sea ice during the entire year. Often, snow falls onto the sea ice. Despite the cold, many plants and animals can live in the Arctic Ocean, some in the water, and some even in the sea ice. Particularly, algae can live in small bubbles in the sea ice. Like other plants, algae need energy to grow. This energy comes from food and sunlight. But how can the sunlight reach these little algae living inside the sea ice? From the sun, the light must pass through the atmosphere, the snow, and finally the sea ice itself. In this article, we describe how ice algae can live in this special environment and we explain what influences how much light reaches the algae to make them grow.


2020 ◽  
Vol 37 (8) ◽  
pp. 1477-1495 ◽  
Author(s):  
An T. Nguyen ◽  
Patrick Heimbach ◽  
Vikram V. Garg ◽  
Victor Ocaña ◽  
Craig Lee ◽  
...  

AbstractThe lack of continuous spatial and temporal sampling of hydrographic measurements in large parts of the Arctic Ocean remains a major obstacle for quantifying mean state and variability of the Arctic Ocean circulation. This shortcoming motivates an assessment of the utility of Argo-type floats, the challenges of deploying such floats due to the presence of sea ice, and the implications of extended times of no surfacing on hydrographic inferences. Within the framework of an Arctic coupled ocean–sea ice state estimate that is constrained to available satellite and in situ observations, we establish metrics for quantifying the usefulness of such floats. The likelihood of float surfacing strongly correlates with the annual sea ice minimum cover. Within the float lifetime of 4–5 years, surfacing frequency ranges from 10–100 days in seasonally sea ice–covered regions to 1–3 years in multiyear sea ice–covered regions. The longer the float drifts under ice without surfacing, the larger the uncertainty in its position, which translates into larger uncertainties in hydrographic measurements. Below the mixed layer, especially in the western Arctic, normalized errors remain below 1, suggesting that measurements along a path whose only known positions are the beginning and end points can help constrain numerical models and reduce hydrographic uncertainties. The error assessment presented is a first step in the development of quantitative methods for guiding the design of observing networks. These results can and should be used to inform a float network design with suggested locations of float deployment and associated expected hydrographic uncertainties.


MAUSAM ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 62 (4) ◽  
pp. 609-616
Author(s):  
AMITA PRABHU ◽  
P.N. MAHAJAN ◽  
R.M. KHALADKAR

The development in the satellite microwave technology during the past three decades has offered an opportunity to the scientific community to access the sea ice data over the polar regions, which was otherwise inaccessible for continuous monitoring by any other means. The present study focuses on the trends in the Sea Ice Extent (SIE) over different sectors of the Arctic and the Antarctic regions and the interannual variability in their extremes. In general, the data over the period (1979-2007) reveal marked interannual variability in the sea ice cover with an increasing and the decreasing trend over the Antarctic and the Arctic region respectively. Over the southern hemisphere, only the Bellingshausen and Amundsen Seas sector shows an exceptional decreasing trend. However, in the northern hemisphere, all the sectors show a decreasing trend, with the Kara and Barents Seas sector being the most prominent one. Although, the decreasing trend of the SIE over the Arctic could be attributed to the global warming, an intriguing question still remains as to why the other polar region shows a different behaviour.


1990 ◽  
Vol 14 ◽  
pp. 339-339
Author(s):  
W.D Hibler ◽  
Peter Ranelli

Sea-ice drift and dynamics can significantly affect the exchanges of heat between the atmosphere and ocean and salt fluxes into the ocean. The ice drift and dynamics, in turn, can be modified by the ocean circulation. This is especially true of the ice margin location whose seasonal characteristics are largely controlled by the substantial oceanic heat flux in the Greenland Sea due to convective overturning.A useful framework to analyze the interannual variability of ice–ocean interaction effects relevant to climatic change is the diagnostic ice–ocean model developed by Hibler and Bryan (1987). In this model, the oceanic temperature and salinity is weakly relaxed (except in the upper layer of the ocean which is essentially driven by the ice dynamic-thermodynamic sea-ice model) to climatological temperature and salinity data. This procedure allows seasonal and interannual variability to be simulated while still preventing the baroclinic characteristics of the ocean circulation from gradually drifting off into a total model defined state. However, in the work of Hibler and Bryan only the seasonal equilibrium characteristics of this model with the same forcing repeated year after year have been considered.In order to begin to examine the interannual behavior of this model, we have carried out a three-year simulation for the Arctic Greenland and Norwegian seas over the time period 1981–83. (The geographical region is essentially the same as used by Hibler and Bryan.) This three year simulation is carried out after an initial two year spin up using the 1981 atmospheric forcing data. For comparison purposes, an ice model simulation with only a fixed depth mixed layer was also carried out over this time interval.The results of these two simulations are analyzed with special attention to the ice margin characteristics in the Greenland and Norwegian seas to determine the role of ocean circulation on the variability there. The ice margin results are also compared to the variability in the northward transports of heat through the Faero-Shetland passage which in the fully-coupled model are calculated rather than specified.


Water ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (5) ◽  
pp. 926
Author(s):  
Guiju Li ◽  
Huixiang Xie ◽  
Guisheng Song ◽  
Michel Gosselin

Chromophoric dissolved organic matter (CDOM) is highly enriched in bottom sea ice in the Arctic during ice algal blooms, giving rise to multifaceted ecological implications in both the sea ice and the underlying seawater. We conducted laboratory culture incubations to assess the potential role of ice algae in the accumulation of CDOM in Arctic sea ice. Non-axenic monocultures of Attheya septentrionalis and Nitzschia frigida and a natural ice algal assemblage (NIAA) were grown at 4 °C in an f/2 medium under cool white fluorescent light. Culture samples were collected several days apart throughout the exponential, stationary, and senescent phases, and analyzed for CDOM absorbance, chlorophyll a, and bacterial cell abundance. The cultures displayed apparent specific growth rates of algal and bacterial cells comparable to those in the field. Accumulations of CDOM were observed in all cultures during the time-course incubations, with the senescent phase showing the largest accumulations and the highest production rates. The senescent-phase production rate for NIAA was ~40% higher than that for A. septentrionalis. The chlorophyll a-normalized CDOM production rates in the cultures are comparable to those reported for Arctic first-year sea ice. The absorption spectra of CDOM in the cultures exhibited characteristic short-ultraviolet shoulders similar to those previously identified in sea ice. This study demonstrates that ice algal-derived CDOM can account for the springtime accumulation of CDOM in Arctic sea ice.


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