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Arctic sea ice reaches record minimum
By Mark Rainer
26 September 2007
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On September 16, the Arctic sea reached its minimum extent
for 2007 at 4.13 million square kilometers, breaking the record
set on September 21, 2005 of 5.32 million square kilometers. The
difference between the previous record and the present one, 1.19
million square kilometers, represents roughly the same area as
Texas and California combined. It is a 22 percent loss in extent
since 2005.
Every year Arctic sea ice extent grows during the winter months
and shrinks during the summer months. At the end of the summer
melt season, usually in September, the sea ice reaches a minimum.
This summer saw an unprecedented rates of loss, with large
portions of the Arctic opening up that were previously covered
by perennial (permanent) sea ice. The Northwest Passagethe
sea route across the Arctic Ocean along the northern coast of
North Americahas opened as a consequence, and several small
islands have been discovered.
Contributing to the record losses this year were unusually
clear skies in the Arctic during June and July, and high-pressure
patterns bringing warm air into the Arctic. The dramatic loss
of ice cover this season is also the result of longer-term trends
and processes in effect since the 1970s and before.
Global warming is a primary driver of the climate change in
the Arctic. Warmer global temperatures caused by greenhouse gasses
have accelerated the melting process. The melting process itself
is enhanced by the ice-albedo feedback effectsurfaces covered
by ice are replaced by open water, which absorbs more solar radiation,
which in turn causes warmer global temperatures.
The melting of Arctic ice is also evident in the thinning of
ice that has not melted. Earlier this month, scientists at the
German-based Alfred-Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research
reported that large areas of sea ice are presently only one meter
thicka thinning of approximately 50 percent since 2001.
Scientists speculate that the replacement of older thicker perennial
sea ice with newer thinner ice began in 1970s. Maintenance of
the older thicker ice is essential to the stability of perennial
sea ice cover.
Measurements of sea ice thickness have been less systematic
then sea ice extent. Most large-scale measurements have come from
the sonar of military submarines. Nonetheless, there has been
a significant observable decline in sea ice thickness seen in
this data and other measurements. Using data from submarine cruises,
Drew Rothrock, a scientist at the University of Washington, and
others estimated that sea ice thickness declined an average of
1.3 meters over the past 30 to 40 years.
Another factor in the decline of sea ice is change in the phase
of Arctic oscillation, a see-saw pattern of alternating atmospheric
pressure at polar and mid-latitudes. The positive phase produces
a strong polar vortex and shifts the mid-latitude jet stream northward.
From 1989 to 1995, the Arctic oscillation entered a strong positive
pattern that is thought to have flushed out older thicker sea
ice from the Arctic.
There is debate among scientists about the amount of sea ice
cover that can be expected in the future. A study by the federal
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) from earlier
this month estimates that the sea will shrink by 40 percent by
2050. The climate models accepted for the study, however, only
took into account observations from 1979 through 1999. The study
does not take into account the more rapid decline in sea ice extent
seen in the past seven years, and in particular the very rapid
decline witnessed this year.
However Mark Serreze, a scientist at the University of Colorados
National Snow and Ice Data Center, recently told the Associated
Press that based on the latest observations, summer Arctic sea
ice could disappear completely by 2030.
The projections of future sea ice extent have a strong impact
on the modeling of features of the Arctic, such as the future
polar bear population. A series of studies released by the United
States Geological Survey (USGS) this month gives projections of
the future polar bear populations. The study notes that the overriding
factor in determining the projections is the decline in ice habitatthe
decline in sea ice extent.
The USGS study estimates a loss of two-thirds of the worlds
polar bear population within 50 years based on more conservative
models of sea ice loss. The study predicts the extinction of 19
polar bear populations by 2050, and another three by 2075. As
striking as these figures may be, in actuality the extinction
of all polar populations could occur much sooner, taking into
account the more rapid decline in sea ice seen recently.
The USGS study was produced at the request of the secretary
of the interior to aid the US Fish and Wildlife Service in determining
whether the polar bear should be considered an endangered species.
This decision, which will be made in January, will affect other
federal agencies in activities such as the approval of oil and
gas leases.
The decline in sea ice extent this year signals a shift that
is taking place in the climate system. The rapidity with which
the ice is melting, exceeding previous projections, is an indication
that global warming could have even more severe and immediate
consequences than current models project.
See Also:
Arctic sea ice at record low
due to global warming
[25 August 2007]
A new race for the North Pole
Russia plants flag, Canada sends troops
[20 August 2007]
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