Climate
Change Traps Deep Ocean Heat, Eliminating Ice-Free Antarctic Enclaves
3
March, 2014
Climate
change is not all just devastating droughts and scorching heat waves.
Rather it’s a myriad of impacts playing out in the incalculably
complex biosphere we know as Earth. For example, this year two polar
vortices usurped most of the eastern U.S. during what was globally
one of the warmest Januaries on record. In Antarctica, a new study
has revealed another pocket of counterintuitive outcomes — in which
climate change is causing the disappearance of ice-free regions,
known as polynyas.
Researchers
from the McGill University and University of Pennsylvania have
discovered evidence that heat from the depths of the ocean is being
trapped under the Antarctic ice shelf due to climate change. This in
turn has effectively closed off a New Zealand-sized large, open body
of water within the Antarctic’s Weddell Sea for the last four
decades, according to the study.
“The
fact that we can still have a surprise like this after studying the
climate system for decades shows just how complex and dangerous
climate change is,” study co-author Eric Galbraith told CTVNews.ca.
“The deep ocean is like the basement of the climate system and
without polynya there’s a trapped door to the basement.”
Published
on March 2nd in the journal Nature Climate Change, the researchers
found that deep ocean heat is trapped under a freshwater lid —
making it unable to melt the winter Antarctic ice pack as it used to.
Satellite images from the mid-1970s, the first taken of the Antarctic
during the polar winter, showed the huge ice-free region enclosed
within the Weddell Sea ice pack. The open area, or polynya, remained
open for three full winters before closing, a lasting phenomenon that
was due to warm water rising up from miles below the ocean’s
surface. The polynya did not reappear in nearly 40 years, and came to
be considered a rare event by scientists.
However,
in this new study, analysis of measurements made across the region
over the last six decades show that the ocean surface has been
getting less salty since the mid-20th century, thus preventing the
freshwater from mixing with warm waters beneath and instead freezing
over.
“Deep
ocean waters only mix directly to the surface in a few small regions
of the global ocean, so this has effectively shut one of the main
conduits for deep ocean heat to escape,” Casimir de Lavergne, a
recent graduate of McGill’s Master’s program in Atmospheric and
Oceanic Sciences and lead author of the paper, said in a statement
from the university.
Jaime
Palter, a professor in McGill’s Department of Atmospheric and
Oceanic Sciences and co-author of the study, said the observations
are in line with the principle that climate change will cause dryer
regions to become dryer and wetter regions to get wetter. “True to
form, the polar Southern Ocean — as a wet place — has indeed
become wetter. And in response to the surface ocean freshening, the
polynyas simulated by the models also disappeared.”
Another
recent study on Antarctic sea ice also found drastic changes in
distribution of ice and open water over the last 50 years,
documenting a decrease of sea ice in the Bellingshausen-Amundsen
sector, but an increase of sea ice in the Ross Sea sector of the
continent. Over the last few years Antarctic sea ice has reached
record levels, which one study found to be driven by stronger winds
that drive ice faster and expose water to frigid winds causing more
ice growth.
“The
duration of ice-free days on the Ross Sea continental shelf has
decreased by over two months over the past three decades,” write
the study’s authors. However, “future projections of regional air
temperature change suggest that substantial warming will occur in the
next century in the Ross Sea sector. These changes are expected to
reverse the sea-ice trends in the future; however the projected
changes in heat content on the continental shelf and ecosystems
dynamics that will occur as a result of such changes remain far from
certain.”
According
to their model, summer sea ice in the Ross Sea could decrease by more
than half by 2050 and more than 75 percent by 2100. Funded by the
National Science Foundation (NSF), the team of four researchers found
that these ice-free periods affect the life cycles of both predators
and prey. For instance, more humpback whales entering the Ross Sea in
the summer could lead to over-predation of krill. “Regardless of
the exact nature of the alterations,” the researchers write,
“substantial portions of the food web that depend on ice in their
life cycles will be negatively impacted, leading to severe ecological
disruptions.”
In
January, an international team of researchers found that Antarctica’s
Pine Island Glacier, the single largest Antarctic contributor to
sea-level rise, could add as much as one centimeter to ocean levels
within the next 20 years.
“Ultimately,
it’s apparent the relationship between ozone depletion, climate
warming from greenhouse gases, natural variability, and how Antarctic
ice responds is all very complicated,” wrote Jason Samenow, Chief
Meteorologist at the Washington Post, about recent Antarctic
conditions. “In sharp contrast, in the Arctic, there seems to be a
relatively straight forward relationship between temperature and ice
extent.”
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