Global Warming Is Pushing Arctic Toward ‘Unprecedented State,’ Research Shows
Rising temperatures are triggering cascading effects across the polar region, from diminishing ice to changes in when plants flower and where wildlife is found.BY BOB BERWYN, INSIDECLIMATE NEWS
8 April, 2019
Global
warming is transforming the Arctic, and the changes have rippled so
widely that the entire biophysical system is shifting toward an
"unprecedented state," an international team of researchers
concludes in a new analysis of nearly 50 years of temperature
readings and changes across the ecosystems.
Arctic
forests are turning into bogs as permafrost melts beneath their
roots. The icy surface that reflects the sun's radiation back into
space is darkeningand
sea ice cover is declining. Warmth and moisture trapped by greenhouse
gases are pumping up the water cycle, swelling rivers that carry more
sediment and nutrients to the sea, which can change ocean chemistry
and affect the coastal marine food chain. And those are just a few of
the changes.
The
researchers describe how warming in the Arctic, which is heating up
2.4 times faster than the Northern Hemisphere average, is triggering
a cascade of changes in everything from when plants flower to where
fish and other animal populations can be found.
Together,
the changes documented in
the study suggest
the effects on the region are more profound than previously
understood.
"What
stands out for me is an intensified hydrological system," said
Jason Box, a climate scientist with the Geological Survey of Denmark
and Greenland and lead author of the study, published today in the
scientific journal Environmental
Research Letters.
Warmer
temperatures have shifted forest and tundra growing seasons, boosted
rain and snowfall, increased melting, accelerated glaciers and
possibly even increased the number of lightning strikes that could
increase the risk of Arctic
wildfires in
the tundra and boreal forest, Box said. "I think this is a clear
signal due to climate warming," he said.
Following
are snapshots of some of the changes underway across the region.
Bering Sea 'In a State We've Never Seen Before'
Commercial
fishers and the indigenous population of the Bering Sea region are
feeling how Arctic change is spilling out of the polar region.
During
two consecutive years of record-low sea
ice,
coastal communities lost the ice buffer that protects the land from
winter storm surges. Pollock and cod, two valuable fish
species,
may be running out of spawning habitat in the Bering Sea, and it's
not clear they've found a replacement area.
Less
sea ice and warming farther north have a domino effect in the Bering
Sea, said Jim Overland, a climate researcher with the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
"In
the past, you had sea ice growing in the fall, with northerly winds
that helped grow ice. Now, with the delay of Arctic-wide freeze-up,
you don't have the pre-conditioning for the Bering freeze-up.
Combined with unusual storm systems, you can get these off-the-charts
changes in the Bering Sea," said Overland, a co-author of the
study.
"Last
year, with no sea ice and no pool of deep, cold water, pollock were
found in the north Bering Sea where they don't usually go. The
question was if they will they spawn in the new location or not, and
it doesn't seem that they did," he said. "When this happens
two years in a row, it becomes really important. The Bering Sea is
now in a state we've never seen before."
The
new paper helps to show how the Arctic is a connected system affected
by global warming, said National Snow and Ice Data Center scientist
Twila Moon, who was not involved in the study.
"It's
causing coastal erosion that eats away at community land, and, in
some cases, causes building and infrastructure loss," she said.
"These Arctic changes are also affecting people and communities
far from the Arctic." Coastal flooding in the U.S., for example,
is worsened by sea level rise that is fed by melting Arctic ice
sheets and glaciers.
Warm Winters Put Spring Closer to Melting Point
Looking
at temperature changes across the seasons, the researchers documented
an Arctic that is warming 2.8 times faster than the rest of the
Northern Hemisphere in the cold season, and 1.7 times faster in the
warmer months.
The
higher rate of cold season warming can be traced to the delayed
freeze-up of sea ice, Box said. The relatively warm (compared to ice)
ocean water increases moisture in the atmosphere, forming clouds that
trap warmth near the surface. The warming in the cold season reduces
the overall "cold content" in the Arctic, like leaving the
freezer door open. When spring starts, snow, ice and permafrost are
already closer to the melting point, he said.
Thawing permafrost creates
another climate risk: As long-frozen organic material starts to
decompose, it releases methane, a potent short-lived
climate pollutant,
as well as CO2, both of which contribute to more warming.
In
recent years, scientists have measured record-high annual average
temperatures in the top 10 to 20 meters of permafrost
at many measuring
sites,
with the biggest warmup in the coldest parts of the northern Arctic.
At three sites on Alaska's North Slope, data in the study show that
the freeze-up of the active permafrost layer (which thaws in summer
and freezes in winter) now comes two months later than it did in the
mid-1980s.
Changing Flowering Times and Snow Cover
The
study found "strong evidence that the summer warming trend is
causing an earlier and more condensed flowering period of key plant
species," leading to mismatches
between plants and pollinators,
as well as making some plants more vulnerable to harmful insects.
Over
time, that could fundamentally change the composition of Arctic
vegetation, which in turn would affect animals that depend on those
plants for food.
The
data also contain widespread evidence that snow cover has been
declining in the Arctic at a rate of two to four days per decade over
the past 30 to 40 years. The trend is stronger the farther north and
the higher up you go, Box said. Most of the decline is due to earlier
snowmelt in spring, but a later start to the snow season is a factor
in some areas, particularly in the eastern Canadian Arctic.
Overall, spring (May and June) snow cover extent has decreased by more than 30 percent since 1971, with evidence of increased ice-layer development in some parts of the Arctic because of more frequent winter thaw and rain events. A decline in the snow cover outside the growing season can make plants more vulnerable to extreme winter temperatures.
Loss of Sea Ice Also Has Ripple Effects
The
decline of sea ice is one of the most closely tracked indicators of
Arctic change. The new paper describes how, over the past half
century, it has shifted "from an environment dominated by thick
multi-year sea ice to one dominated by thinner first-year sea ice,
with an earlier start to the melt season and a later start to the
freeze-up."
A study published
April 2 in Scientific
Reports digs
into one of the ways global warming is affecting sea ice formation
and transport.
Off
the coast of Russia, sea ice forms as cold winds blowing off the big
landmass chill the water. At the same time, the winds push the newly
formed ice near the shore northward toward the central Arctic. Over
months, those drifting floes pile up to form thick ice that can last
through the summer. But with a warmer atmosphere and ocean, more of
that newly formed ice melts before it gets out of the formation
region, said Thomas Krumpen, a sea ice physicist with the Alfred
Wegener's Institute, who scoured satellite images to show changes in
the transpolar drift current.
The
breakdown of the ice transport will have impacts on Arctic Ocean
ecosystems because the ice formed near shorelines carries with it
minerals and tiny biological organisms, including plankton and algae,
"like frozen spinach packed in ice," said Eva-Maria Nöthig,
an AWI oceanographer who studies the biology of the Arctic Ocean.
"The
ice floes with all these particles inside are getting thinner,"
she said. "All the organisms, from fish at the surface to
benthic organisms 4,000 meters deep, who need the sea ice for their
development will be gone."
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.