Figure 5. The Arctic summer
sea ice extent in 2012, (measured
in September) was a record low,
shown (in white) compared to the
median summer sea ice extent for
1979 to 2000 (in orange outline). In
2013, Arctic summer sea ice extent
rebounded somewhat, but was still
the sixth smallest extent on record.
Source: National Snow and Ice Data
Center | Sea ice extent is affected by winds and ocean currents as well as temperature. Sea ice
in the partly-enclosed Arctic Ocean seems to be responding directly to warming, while
changes in winds and in the ocean seem to be dominating the patterns of climate and sea
ice change in the ocean around Antarctica. Sea ice in the Arctic has decreased dramatically since the late 1970s, particularly in summer and autumn.
Since the satellite record began in 1978 (providing for the first time a complete and continuous areal
coverage of the Arctic), the yearly minimum Arctic sea ice extent (which occurs in early to mid-September)
has decreased by more than 40% [Figure 5]. Ice cover expands again each Arctic winter but the ice is
thinner than it used to be. Estimates of past sea ice extent suggest that this decline may be unprecedented
in at least the past 1,450 years. The total volume of ice, the product of ice thickness and area, has
decreased faster than ice extent over the past decades. Because sea ice is highly reflective, warming is
amplified as the ice decreases and more sunshine is absorbed by the darker underlying ocean surface.
Sea ice in the Antarctic has shown a slight increase in extent since 1979 overall, although some areas,
such as that to the west of the Antarctic Peninsula, have experienced a decrease. Changes in surface
wind patterns around the continent have contributed to the Antarctic pattern of sea ice change while
ocean factors such as the addition of cool fresh water from melting ice shelves may also have played a
role. The wind changes include a recent strengthening of westerly winds, which reduces the amount of
warm air from low latitudes penetrating into the southern high latitudes and alters the way in which ice
moves away from the continent. The change in winds may result in part from the effects of stratospheric
ozone depletion over Antarctica (i.e., the ozone hole, a phenomenon that is distinct from the humandriven
changes in long-lived
greenhouse gases discussed in
this document). However, shortterm
trends in the Southern
Ocean, such as those observed,
can readily occur from natural
variability of the atmosphere,
ocean and sea ice system. |