Arctic
ocean losing 50% more summer ice than predicted
Sea
ice in the Arctic is disappearing at a far greater rate than
previously expected, according to data from the first purpose-built
satellite launched to study the thickness of the Earth’s polar
caps
.
11
August, 2012
Preliminary
results from the European Space Agency’s CryoSat-2 probe indicate
that 900 cubic kilometers of summer sea ice has disappeared from the
Arctic ocean over the past year.
This
rate of loss is 50% higher than most scenarios outlined by polar
scientists and suggests that global warming, triggered by rising
greenhouse gas emissions, is beginning to have a major impact on the
region. In a few years the Arctic ocean could be free of ice in
summer, triggering a rush to exploit its fish stocks, oil, minerals
and sea routes.
Using
instruments on earlier satellites, scientists could see that the area
covered by summer sea ice in the Arctic has been dwindling rapidly.
But the new measurements indicate that this ice has been thinning
dramatically at the same time. For example, in regions north of
Canada and Greenland, where ice thickness regularly stayed at around
five to six meters in summer a decade ago, levels have dropped to one
to three meters.
“Preliminary
analysis of our data indicates that the rate of loss of sea ice
volume in summer in the Arctic may be far larger than we had
previously suspected,” said Dr Seymour Laxon, of the Centre for
Polar Observation and Modelling at University College London (UCL),
where CryoSat-2 data is being analyzed. “Very soon we may
experience the iconic moment when, one day in the summer, we look at
satellite images and see no sea ice coverage in the Arctic, just open
water.”
The
consequences of losing the Arctic’s ice coverage, even for only
part of the year, could be profound. Without the cap’s white
brilliance to reflect sunlight back into space, the region will heat
up even more than at present. As a result, ocean temperatures will
rise and methane deposits on the ocean floor could melt, evaporate
and bubble into the atmosphere. Scientists have recently reported
evidence that methane plumes are now appearing in many areas. Methane
is a particularly powerful greenhouse gas and rising levels of it in
the atmosphere are only likely to accelerate global warming. And with
the disappearance of sea ice around the shores of Greenland, its
glaciers could melt faster and raise sea levels even more rapidly
than at present.
Professor
Chris Rapley of UCL said: “With the temperature gradient between
the Arctic and equator dropping, as is happening now, it is also
possible that the jet stream in the upper atmosphere could become
more unstable. That could mean increasing volatility in weather in
lower latitudes, similar to that experienced this year.”
CryoSat-2
is the world’s first satellite to be built specifically to study
sea-ice thickness and was launched on a Dniepr rocket from Baikonur
cosmodrome, Kazakhstan, on 8 April, 2010. Previous Earth monitoring
satellites had mapped the extent of sea-ice coverage in the Arctic.
However, the thickness of that ice proved more difficult to measure.
The
US probe ICESat made some important measurements of ice thickness but
operated intermittently in only a few regions before it stopped
working completely in 2009. CryoSat was designed specifically to
tackle the issue of ice thickness, both in the Arctic and the
Antarctic. It was fitted with radar that can see through clouds.
(ICESat’s lasers could not penetrate clouds.) CryoSat’s orbit was
also designed to give better coverage of the Arctic sea.
“Before
CryoSat, we could see summer ice coverage was dropping markedly in
the Arctic,” said Rapley. “But we only had glimpses of what was
happening to ice thickness. Obviously if it was dropping as well, the
loss of summer ice was even more significant. We needed to know what
was happening – and now CryoSat has given us the answer. It has
shown that the Arctic sea cap is not only shrinking in area but is
also thinning dramatically.”
Sea-ice
cover in the Arctic varies considerably throughout the year, reaching
a maximum in March. By combining earlier results from ICESat and data
from other studies, including measurements made by submarines
traveling under the polar ice cap, Laxon said preliminary analysis
now gave a clear indication of Arctic sea-ice loss over the past
eight years, both in winter and in summer.
In
winter 2004, the volume of sea ice in the central Arctic was
approximately 17,000 cubic kilometers. This winter it was 14,000,
according to CryoSat.
However,
the summer figures provide the real shock. In 2004 there was about
13,000 cubic kilometers of sea ice in the Arctic. In 2012, there is
7,000 cubic kilometers, almost half the figure eight years ago. If
the current annual loss of around 900 cubic kilometers continues,
summer ice coverage could disappear in about a decade in the Arctic.
However,
Laxon urged caution, saying: “First, this is based on preliminary
studies of CryoSat figures, so we should take care before rushing to
conclusions. In addition, the current rate of ice volume decline
could change.” Nevertheless, experts say computer models indicate
rates of ice volume decline are only likely to increase over the next
decade.
As
to the accuracy of the measurements made by CryoSat, these have been
calibrated by comparing them to measurements made on the ice surface
by scientists including Laxon; by planes flying beneath the
satellite’s orbit; and by data supplied by underwater sonar
stations that have analyzed ice thickness at selected places in the
Arctic. “We can now say with confidence that CryoSat’s maps of
ice thickness are correct to within 10cm,” Laxon added.
Laxon
also pointed out that the rate of ice loss in winter was much slower
than that in summer. “That suggests that, as winter starts, ice is
growing more rapidly than it did in the past and that this effect is
compensating, partially, for the loss of summer ice.” Overall, the
trend for ice coverage in Arctic is definitely downwards,
particularly in summer, however – a point recently backed by
Professor Peter Wadham, who this year used aircraft and submarine
surveys of ice sheets to make estimates of ice volume loss. These
also suggest major reductions in the volume of summer sea ice, around
70% over the past 30 years.
“The
Arctic is particularly vulnerable to the impact of global warming,”
said Rapley. “Temperatures there are rising far faster than they
are at the equator. Hence the shrinking of sea-ice coverage we have
observed. It is telling us that something highly significant is
happening to Earth. The weather systems of the planet are
interconnected so what happens in the high latitudes affects us all.”
Climate
change may boost frog disease chytridiomycosis
More
changeable temperatures, a consequence of global warming, may be
helping to abet the threat that a lethal fungal disease poses to
frogs
11
August, 2012
Scientists
found that when temperatures vary unpredictably, frogs succumb faster
to chytridiomycosis, which is killing amphibians around the world.
The
animals' immune systems appear to lose potency during unpredictable
temperature shifts.
The
research is published in Nature
Climate Change journal.
Chytridiomycosis,
caused by the parasitic fungus Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd),
was identified only in 1998.
It
affects frogs and their amphibian relatives - salamanders, and the
worm-like caecilians - and has caused a number of species
extinctions.
For
article GO
HERE
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