A
record low-start to the new year in Antarctica
Figure
1: Sea ice extent for January 1, 2019. High-resolution version
3
January, 2019
As
of January 1, 2019, Antarctic sea ice extent had experienced several
days of record lows. These record-low extents, which followed a
period of rapid ice loss in December, exemplify the high seasonal and
year-to-year variability in Antarctic sea ice. With six to eight
weeks remaining in the melt season, it remains to be seen whether the
present situation will persist and lead to a record-low annual
minimum. A discussion of Arctic conditions will be posted next week.
Overview
of conditions
Sea
ice extent for January 1, 2019
On
January 1, Antarctic sea ice extent stood at 5.47 million square
kilometers (2.11 million square miles), the lowest extent on this
date in the satellite record (since 1978). This value is 30,000
square kilometers (11,600 square miles) below the previous record low
for January 1, set in 2017, and 1.88 million square kilometers
(726,000 square miles) below the 1981 to 2010 average. Extent
declined at a rate of 253,000 square kilometers (97,700 square miles)
per day through December, considerably faster than the 1981 to 2010
mean for December of 214,000 square kilometers (82,600 square miles)
per day. Indeed, the rate of Antarctic ice extent loss for December
2018 is the fastest in the satellite record, albeit close to 2010 and
2005.
Conditions
in context
On
December 26, Antarctic sea ice extent fell below the low mark for
this date, set in 2016, and has continued to track below all other
years. Notably, the November to December 2016 period was considered
an extreme excursion of Antarctic sea ice at the time. However, since
then Antarctic sea ice extent has continually remained below the 1981
to 2010 median and mostly below the interquartile extent (below 75
percent of the 30-year range of values). This change in behavior,
which began during the austral spring of 2016, contradicts prior
characterizations of Antarctic sea ice cover as slowly expanding, yet
highly variable. Instead, another strong decline through late
December 2018 has taken the extent below the November and December
2016 levels to new record lows. Antarctica’s high year-to-year
variability (record high extents for December were observed as
recently as 2014 and 2007) suggests that a conclusive sea ice trend
associated with the warming air and ocean around Antarctica has yet
to reveal itself.
Spatial
patterns of loss
The
rapid ice loss through December 2018 and into early January 2019 has
exposed large areas of the Southern Ocean that are typically
ice-covered at this time of year. At the beginning of December 2018,
a substantial band of ice ringed most of the Antarctic continent,
although regions of open water had begun to appear along portions of
the coast near the Amery Ice Shelf and within the ice pack to the
east of the Weddell Sea (Figure 3). Despite being ice-covered at the
beginning of the month, concentrations were quite low in the eastern
Weddell, eastern Ross Sea, and the region north (and to either side)
of the Amery. These areas have since melted out completely. Many
other areas of low concentration ice remain, particularly in the
northeastern Weddell Sea and the northern Ross Sea.
These
areas are expected to melt out soon.
Six
to eight weeks remain in the Antarctic melt season. Whether the
record low daily extents now being seen will persist and lead to a
record seasonal minimum cannot be predicted.
Although
it is too soon for us to isolate what caused the rapid December
decline and recent record low extents, it is likely that unusual
atmospheric conditions and high sea surface temperatures—important
factors in the 2016-2017 record lows—are playing a role.
Unfortunately, as of this post our usual source of atmospheric data
is not accessible due to the U.S. government shutdown. NSIDC will
continue to monitor the low ice conditions in the Antarctic and will
provide updated analyses through the austral summer.
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