Arctic
Waters Keep Warming in 2013
NASA,
13
December, 2013
The
Arctic continued to shift to a warmer, greener
state in 2013. That was the headline from the latest Arctic
Report Card,
an annual update prepared by scientists from the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and partner organizations such as
NASA. Scientists are tracking a variety of environmental indicators
including: air temperature, snow cover, sea ice extent, ocean
temperature, vegetation growth, and wildlife behavior. In comparison
to 2012, most indicators this year were closer to their long-term
averages, but signs of change (fueled by long-term warming) were
still present.
For
instance, most surface waters within the Arctic Circle were warmer
than average in summer 2013. This map shows where sea
surface temperatures
(SSTs) in August 2013 were warmer (red) or cooler (blue) than the
1982–2006 average. Sea
ice extent
is solid white. Although some areas experienced unusually cool SSTs
in August 2013—especially in the Chukchi and East Siberian
Seas—unusually high temperatures dominated most of the Arctic Ocean
and surrounding straits and seas.
Warm
waters in the eastern Arctic were probably related to an
earlier-than-normal retreat of sea ice from the area and possibly an
inflow of warmer water from the North Atlantic. Retreating sea ice
would have left the Kara and Barents Seas exposed to warm summer
sunlight. Meanwhile, on the western side of the Arctic, sea ice
retreat was later and less extensive than normal, contributing to
cooler-than-average surface temperatures in the Chukchi and East
Siberian Seas.
By
September, surface waters around the Barents Sea Opening (between
Svalbard and Scandinavia) were about 5°F (3°C) warmer than they
were in 2012. Southern Barents Sea temperatures reached 52°F (11°C),
which is 9°F (5°C) warmer than the 1977–2006 average.
During
a press
conference
about the report, University of Virginia scientist Howard
Epstein
emphasized that ongoing changes in the Arctic are not happening in a
vacuum. “The Arctic is not like Vegas,” he said. “What happens
in the Arctic doesn’t stay in the Arctic. The major changes that we
see in the sea ice, the spring snow cover extent, the increasing
vegetation, the potential changes in greenhouse gases fluxes—these
are all things that have implications that extend beyond just the
Arctic to the rest of the world.”
References
NOAA
Climate (2013, December 12) 2013
Arctic Report Card: Arctic boundary waters warmer than average in
summer.
Accessed December 12, 2013.
Further
Reading
Map
by NOAA Climate.gov, based on data provided by Mike Steele and Wendy
Ermold, University of Washington; and the National Snow and Ice Data
Center. Caption by Rebecca Lindsey and Adam Voiland.
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