Sensors and Systems
Breaking News
HERE Technologies and AWS Unveil AI-Powered “SceneXtract” to Transform Real-World Automated Driving Simulations
Rating12345 Seamless integration of HERE HD Live Map and...
HERE and AWS Collaborate on New HERE AI Mapping Solutions to Accelerate the Development of Software-Defined Vehicles
Rating12345 HERE enters into 10-year, $1 billion cloud infrastructure...
INSPIRE UTC @Missouri S&T Showcases at the 2025 TRB Annual Meeting
Rating12345Since 2017, the INSPIRE UTC (https://inspire-utc.mst.edu) has conducted research...

December 29th, 2010
Publication on the Vulnerabilities of Marine and Sea Ice–based Ecosystems

  • Rating12345

The objectives of the paper are to summarise: (1) observed 20th-century and projected 21st-century changes in key components of the Arctic climate system and (2) probable impacts on the Arctic marine environment, with emphasis on the vulnerabilities of marine and sea ice–based ecosystems.

Multi-decadal to century-scale observational data sets of surface air temperature (SAT) and sea ice indicate that the two pronounced 20th-century warming events, both amplified in the Arctic, were linked to sea-ice variability. Arctic sea-ice coverage has decreased approx. 8% in the past quarter century, with record- and near record low summer ice in observed recent years. A set of coupled atmosphere–ice–ocean global model simulations quantifies the expected changes in Arctic temperature and sea ice through the twenty-first century. Projected are polar-amplified increases in SAT and reductions in sea ice, with a predominantly ice-free Arctic Ocean in summer projected before the end of this century.

A range of potential consequences of Arctic warming and a shrinking ice cover are foreseen. First, exposure of vast areas of the Arctic Ocean would greatly alter the coastal and shelf marine environment. Second, broad changes in the marine and sea ice–based ecosystem – e.g. changes in plankton due to less ice and greater inflow of melt water – could negatively impact Arctic and sub-Arctic marine biodiversity, not least the vulnerable ice-based mammals such as polar bears. Third, there would be a larger open area for potential Arctic fisheries, as well as increased offshore activities and marine transportation, including the Northern Sea Route north of Siberia. Changes in the physical environment of the Arctic Ocean are thus expected to be dramatic, and although projecting ecosystem changes several decades into twenty-first century is challenging, the impact of diminishing sea ice on Arctic marine and sea ice–based ecosystems will certainly be transformative.

 

The paper is available at;

ftp://ftp.nersc.no/Press/Publications/Johannessen_2010_REC.pdf

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *