Title: ARCTIC SEA ICE COVER
1ARCTIC SEA ICE COVER
September 2005
NASA
2SEA ICE EXTENT
2006 At or near record minimum in summer and
winter
3SEA ICE EXTENT
Max. Extent 2.5 per decade Min. Extent 8.9
per decade
1979-2006 Decreasing trend
4The Road Ahead?
UCAR, Holland et al., 2006
Ice-free summers in foreseeable future
5SEA ICE COVER aka The Great Integrator
Reflects impact of atmospheric and oceanic forcing
6Arctic Oscillation (AO)Two Dominant Regimes
Negative AO
Positive AO
ICE LOSES
ICE GAINS
- Colder winter temperatures
- Strong Beaufort Gyre
- Warmer winter temperatures
- Transpolar Drift Stream sweeps ice out of
Arctic Ocean
7Atmospheric Oscillation (AO)
Strong positive pattern dominated from 1989
1996 Favors loss of sea ice
More neutral pattern from 2000 -
2006 Opportunity for recovery
8Arctic Surface Air Temperature1900- 2006
Arctic-wide, annual averaged SAT anomalies (60
90N) over land
1980-present Warming trend
9 Warming Arctic trend consistent with global trend
10SURFACE TEMPERATURE
- March-May temperature anomaly composites
- Relative to a 1968-1996 base period
Despite shift, positive (warm) anomalies remain
over the entire Arctic
11OCEANTemperature
Southeastern Bering Sea continental shelf mooring
2006 Significant cooling compared to previous
6-years
12North Pole Region
OCEAN
Salinity
Temperature
Temperature Salinity
2000
- Anomalies relative to EWG climatology
(1950-1980s) - NPEO surveys J-CADÂ
2000-2005 Relaxation to near pre-1990
climatology
2005
Morison et al., 2006a
132006 Arctic Report CardSea Ice Cover
- Arctic Oscillation
- Surface Temperature
- Ocean Temperature
Why continued decrease in extent?
14Ice albedo feedback
Melting
Melting
Melting
Positive Feedback Cycle
Absorbed sunlight
Absorbed sunlight
Lower albedo
Absorbed sunlight
Lower albedo
Lower albedo
15SEA ICE AGE(Think thickness)
Sep 1987
Russia
Older, thicker ice
Alaska
Canada
Sep 2006
Younger, thinner ice
1988-1990 Precipitous decrease in thick ice
16PERENNIAL SEA ICEOlder, thicker ice
Strong Persistent Positive AO
Rigor Nghiem
Significant decrease in older ice
17Sea ice cover susceptible to loss
Confluence of Events
18State of the Arctic Sea Ice Cover
- Summary
- System under stress
- Destabilization?
Will system rebound? or Has a tipping point
been reached?
- Through mid - 1990s
- AO index effective predictor
- of trends in sea ice
- characteristics
- 1989-1996 Strong positive AO
- 2000s
- AO shifted back to more neutral state
- Sea ice not following suit
- Continued reduction in sea ice extent
- Continued reduction in amount of older, thicker
ice
19International Polar Year
http//www.ipy.org/
20IMPACT OF IPY2007-2008