Around
the World: Atlantic Warming Melts Antarctic Ice
Though
physically about as distant from Antarctica as you can get, water
masses in the North and Tropical Atlantic Ocean significantly
influence the effects of climate change
on the icy southernmost continent, new research suggests
22
January, 2015
Antarctic
climate has changed considerably over the past several decades, with
the Antarctic Peninsula — located on the West Antarctic Ice Sheet —
experiencing more warming than any other region on Earth. Researchers
have long recognized that atmospheric and oceanographic conditions,
such
as wind speed and direction, in the southern Pacific Ocean play
an important role in the climate of Antarctica and the distribution
of its ice. But Pacific conditions cannot entirely explain all the
changes currently occurring in and around Antarctica, particularly
during the austral (Southern Hemisphere) winter. [North
vs. South Poles: 10 Wild Differences]
Now,
a team of researchers based at New York University has studied more
than 30 years of atmospheric data collected from around the world to
try to identify other key atmospheric players in Antarctic climate.
The team found that water temperatures in the North and Tropical
Atlantic Ocean correlate strongly with sea-level pressure in
Antarctica's
Amundsen Sea, which influences the behavior of sea ice in the
region.
"Those
things stuck out as a sore thumb that said they were related,"
study co-author David Holland told LiveScience. "That doesn't
mean one thing causes the other, but they are strongly related."
The
team next tested whether the correlation between Atlantic and
Antarctic water masses represented a true cause-effect relationship,
or whether it was just a coincidence. To do so, the researchers used
atmospheric
models to simulate changes in the Antarctic climate under various
global atmospheric and oceanic conditions. To their surprise, they
found that directly raising temperatures in the North and Tropical
Atlantic in their models did, indeed, have the same effects on wind
patterns and ultimately the distribution of sea ice around Antarctica
as the historical records showed happened in real life.
This
suggests that the Atlantic temperatures and Antarctic sea ice are
causally linked, Holland said.
It
may seem counterintuitive that ocean temperatures in one hemisphere
could have such a large impact on ice distribution in another
hemisphere. However, as Holland explained, Atlantic conditions
propagate out of the Northern Hemisphere in an atmospheric ripple
effect: Warm water masses in the Atlantic change atmospheric
conditions that eventually turn the gears of the Southern
Hemisphere's atmospheric patterns, finally getting sucked down into
the region surrounding Antarctica.
Next,
the team hopes to better understand what drives the yearly and
decadal changes in the North and Tropical Atlantic Ocean that have
caused observed changes in Antarctica over the past 30 years. They
also want to better understand why ice in Antarctica reacts to
climate change
differently than does ice in the Arctic. Antarctic ice has been
redistributed more than it has disappeared in recent years, while
Artic ice has experienced more melting.
The
study findings appear today (Jan. 22) in the journal Nature.
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