Arctic
Heat: Wildfire Smoke Blankets Siberia, Alaska Shatters Temperature
Records, Arctic Ocean Heat Sets off Large Algae Bloom
31
July, 2013
There’s
a lot of noise these days over the issue of global warming and human
caused climate change. The static includes the intransigence of
industry supported climate change deniers, a great confusion over
climate context within some wings of the media, a number of
increasingly personal attacks on the messengers — scientists,
journalists, bloggers, and emerging threats experts — who
communicate critical information related to climate change, and even
a degree of professional disagreement within the sciences and among
experts over key issues such as the potential rate of global methane
release due to human warming.
Despite
all the vitriol, controversy and confusion, the signal coming from
the Earth System couldn’t be clearer — the Arctic is showing
every sign of rapid heat amplification and related emerging feedbacks
and environmental changes.
The
Arctic ring of fire
Over
the continents circling the warming Arctic Ocean, a band from about
70 degrees north to about 55 degrees north, has increasingly erupted
into heatwaves and massive wildfires. This year, huge fires blanketed
both Canada and Russia, with a recent very large outbreak spreading
over Siberia.
Over
the past two weeks, numerous wildfires roared through Arctic tundra
and boreal forests alike over a sprawling swath of northern Russia.
These blazes rapidly multiplied to nearly 200 fires, covering most of
Arctic Russia in a pallor of thick, soupy, smoke. The smog cloud
blanketing Siberia now stretches nearly 3,000 miles in length and
1,500 miles in width, covering an immense slice of the Arctic and
adjacent regions. The fires coincided with a large methane pulse that
sent local readings to nearly 2,000 ppb, almost 200 ppb above the
global average. Whether these higher methane levels were set off by a
prolonged Arctic heatwave that has settled over Siberia since June or
were tapped by the fires’ direct contact with thawing tundra
remains unclear. But tundra melt and related carbon release, almost
certainly set off by far above average temperatures for this Arctic
region, clearly resulted in conditions that favored a heightened
level of emission (You
can track current global methane emissions through the excellent
site: Methane Tracker.)
These
massive blazes continued today with the most recent Modis shot
showing a rash of red hotspots beneath a thickening ceiling of smoke:
Arctic
wildfires are an important and dangerous feedback to a warming polar
climate. The fires produce soot that traps additional heat in the air
while aloft and through reduction in the albedo of the surfaces it
rains down upon. If the soot ends up on ice sheets, it can greatly
amplify the summer sun, chewing large holes and accelerating melt
(the Dark Snow Project is
studying this highly worrisome dynamic). The fires also render
carbon stocks locked in both the forest and the tundras through
direct burning. As such, the fires result in a major extra CO2
emission source. The
current fire in Siberia also appears to be exaggerating methane
release from thawing tundra as large methane spikes appeared in the
fire affected regions.
The
result is that more heat is locked into an already vulnerable Arctic
and global environment.
Alaska
shatters temperature records
Meanwhile,
across the Arctic, Fairbanks
reported its 14th straight day of above 70 degree temperatures,
shattering the previous record of 13 days running back in 2004.
The Arctic location has also seen 80+ degree weather (Fahrenheit) for
29 days so far this summer and 85+ degree weather for 12 days this
summer. The record for 80+ degree days is 30 during a summer and the
previous record for 85 + degree days was 10 days. A ‘usual’
Alaskan summer only saw 11 80 degree days, with the current number
for 2013 nearly tripling that mark.
So
Fairbanks has shattered two summer high temperature duration records
and is now closing in on a third. Since predictions call for high 70
to low 80 degree weather for at least the next few days, it appears
likely that this final mark will fall as well. The Alaskan heat is
expected to continue through at least this weekend after which
temperatures are expected to fall into, the still above average,
lower 70s.
Given
these record hot conditions in Alaska, one has to wonder at the
potential for fires to erupt in this region as well. An outbreak of
large fires spread through the region in June. But compared to Canada
and Russia, which have both seen major fire outbreaks, Alaska has
been relatively quiet. Methane Tracker shows little in the way of
1950 ppb or higher readings over Alaska at the moment. But this is an
uncertain indication to say the least.
The
current Arctic Weather Map shows broad regions of warm to hot daytime
conditions throughout much of the Arctic. Areas of highest
temperatures are located in Alaska, Northwestern Canada, Siberia and
Northern Europe. These
Arctic heatwave conditions have persisted throughout the summer of
2013, drifting in a slow circle along with their related heat
domes and high amplitude Jet Stream pulses. So far, these
conditions have shown little evidence of abating.
The
above images show respective daytime temperature forecasts provided
by Arctic Weather Maps. Areas in red indicate temperatures
ranging from 77 to 86 degrees. The first image shows daytime in
Alaska and Canada for Thursday, August 1. The second image shows
predicted daytime temperatures for Siberia and Europe for the same
date.
Arctic
Ocean heat anomaly soars
In
addition to an immense rash of wildfires belching enormous plumes of
smoke that now cover most of Northern Russia and record-smashing high
temperature streaks in Alaska, we continue to see a rising heat
temperature anomaly over a vast region of the Arctic Ocean. A broad
stretch of sea area shows .5 to 1 degree Celsius above average sea
surface temperatures. This region includes the Central Arctic Basin
which has seen broad, anomalous areas of much thinner, more dispersed
sea ice coverage. Isolated regions are showing temperatures in the
range of 2 to 4 degrees Celsius warmer than average with the hottest
region over the Barents and the Kara Seas near Norway and northern
Russia.
The
region where the highest heat anomaly measures have appeared also
shows a very large green algae bloom. This oil slick like region is
clearly visible in a freakish neon off-set to the typically dark
Arctic waters. Higher ocean heat content and added nutrients
increasingly fuel these kinds of blooms which can lead to fish kills
and ocean anoxia in the regions affected. This particular bloom is
very large, stretching about 700 miles in length and 200 miles in
width along a region near the northern coast of Scandinavia.
Very
large algae bloom north of Scandinavia. Image source Lance
Modis.
As
the oceans warm due to human caused climate forcing, there is
increasing risk that large algae blooms and increasing regions of
ocean anoxia will continue to spread and grow through the world ocean
system. In the more extreme case, the current mixed ocean environment
can turn into a dangerous stratified anoxic ocean environment. Past
instances of such events occurred during the Paleocene and during
ages prior. Oceans moving toward a more anoxic state put severe
stress on numerous creatures inhabiting various ocean levels and is
yet one more stress to add to heat-caused coral bleaching and ocean
acidification due to increasing CO2 dissolution.
Ocean
mixing is driven by the massive ocean heat and salt conveyors known
as the thermohaline circulation. Slowing and changing circulation
patterns can result in switches from a mixed, oxygenated ocean
environment, to a stratified, anoxic state. Currently, a number of
the major ocean conveyors, including the Gulf Stream and the warm
water current near Antarctica, have slowed somewhat due to added
fresh water melting as a result of human caused climate change.
Movement
toward a more anoxic ocean state is an added stress on the world
climate system and another of the myriad impacts set off by human
warming. Though a complete switch from a mixed ocean to an anoxic
ocean is still far off, it is an important long-term risk to
consider. Perhaps one of the absolute worst effects of an unabated
burning of fossil fuels and related carbon emissions by humans would
be the emergence of a terrible primordial ocean state called a
Canfield Ocean. But this is another, rather unsavory topic, likely
worth exploring in another blog (nod
to prokaryotes who has been fearfully hinting about risks associated
with this particularly nasty climate mechanism on internet boards and
in blogs and comments for years).
In
the meantime, it’s worth considering the clear and visible effects
of Arctic amplification currently in train: massive Siberian
wildfires along with immense smoke plumes and troubling methane
pulses, an ongoing Arctic heat wave that continues to break
temperature records, and very high Arctic ocean temperature anomalies
that are setting off massive algae blooms north of the Arctic circle.
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