From
2015 – discovered by accident
Seven
surprising results from the reduction of Arctic Sea ice cover
David Barber - TEDxUManitoba
This
talk was given at a local TEDx event, produced independently of the
TED Conferences. It is now well known that sea ice in the Arctic has
changed in both extent and thickness over the past several decades.
In fact the change in sea ice is seen as one of the key global
climate variables confirming model estimates of global scale warming
of our planet through the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
(IPCC) process. Extensive investigations at the leading edge of
Arctic System Science have recently uncovered a number of surprises,
many somewhat counterintuitive, each having significant consequences
in the Arctic and through teleconnections to the rest of our planet.
In this talk I will review the rate and magnitude of change in sea
ice, put this into the context of our understanding of the ‘natural
variability’ in sea ice over the past several thousand years. I
will then review seven surprising impacts of this change:
1) increasing coverage of young ice significantly changes atmospheric chemistry;
2) more snow both preserves and destroys ice;
3) Polar bear habitat can actually improve in some areas while deteriorating in others;
4) match-mismatch timing in the marine ecosystem increases vulnerability;
5) uncertainty as to whether the Arctic ocean will increase or decrease in overall productivity is a key unknown;
6) evidence that ice hazards are actually increasing while the world marshals to increase development of Arctic resources; and
7) evidence that our recent cold winters are actually linked to our warming Arctic.
1) increasing coverage of young ice significantly changes atmospheric chemistry;
2) more snow both preserves and destroys ice;
3) Polar bear habitat can actually improve in some areas while deteriorating in others;
4) match-mismatch timing in the marine ecosystem increases vulnerability;
5) uncertainty as to whether the Arctic ocean will increase or decrease in overall productivity is a key unknown;
6) evidence that ice hazards are actually increasing while the world marshals to increase development of Arctic resources; and
7) evidence that our recent cold winters are actually linked to our warming Arctic.
Dr.
Barber obtained his Bachelors and Masters from the University of
Manitoba, and his Ph.D. from the University of Waterloo, Ontario. He
was appointed to a faculty position at the University of Manitoba in
1993 and received a Canada Research Chair in Arctic System Science in
2002. He is currently Associate Dean (Research), CHR Faculty of
Environment, Earth and Resources. Dr. Barber has extensive experience
in the examination of the Arctic marine environment as a ‘system’,
and the effect
climate change has on this system. Dr. Barber has published over 200
articles in the peer-reviewed literature pertaining to sea ice,
climate change and physical-biological coupling in the Arctic marine
system. He led the largest International Polar Year project in the
world, known as the Circumpolar Flaw Lead system study. He is
recognized internationally through scientific leadership in large
network programs such as NOW, CASES, ArcticNet, and the Canadian
Research Icebreaker (Amundsen), as an invited member of several
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council national
committees, international committees and invitations to national and
international science meetings. Dr. Barber was instrumental in a
national competition to bring a Canada Excellence Research Chair
(CERC) to the University of Manitoba in the field of Arctic
Geomicrobiology and Climate Change. As a member of the Centre for
Earth Observation Science he leads a polar marine science group of
over 100 people
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