The
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration or NOAA recently released its
annual update to the Arctic Report Card for 2011. This report updates
conditions in the Arctic atmosphere, ocean and land mass, noting changes in
marine ice cover and glacial melting among other issues. Scientists note
that the Arctic acts as the world's "canary in a coal mine" because
changes in climate in the Arctic are amplified compared to what is observed at
lower latitudes where most of humanity lives. Now, let's take a look at
NOAA's findings for 2011.
To
open, it is well worth two minutes of your time to view NOAA's video on the
Arctic Report Card for 2011:
Let's
begin by looking at changes in the Arctic's sea ice. Over the past
decade, sea ice distribution and thickness in the Arctic has changed. The
Arctic sea ice is now both thinner and covers a less extensive area; this has
resulted in both warming and freshening of the upper layer of the Arctic Ocean
waters. In 2011, the summer extent of the sea ice cover dropped by 15 to
20 percent below the 20 year average between 1979 and 2000. In fact, the
minimum Arctic sea ice extent in September 2011 was the second-lowest since
satellite records began in 1979. Here are two maps showing the maximum and minimum sea ice extent for the
months of March 2011 and September 2011 with the magenta line showing the
median maximum and minimum ice coverage:
The
March 2011 maximum ice coverage value was 14.64 million square kilometres; this
is down 7.7 percent from the 1979 to 2000 average. The September 2011
minimum ice coverage value was 4.33 million square kilometres, the second
lowest on record after 2007 and 31 percent lower than the 1979 to 2000 average.
The five summers between 2007 and 2011 have seen five of the lowest ice
coverage values and the 10 summers between 2002 and 2011 have seen nine of the
ten lowest values. Here is a graph showing the gradual percentage
decrease in both maximum and minimum ice extent values since 1979:
The
biggest problem with the melting of sea ice is that it becomes a
self-perpetuating machine. The increased melting is related to the
concept of albedo. Albedo is a unitless
quantity that indicates how well a given surface reflects light, with values
varying between zero and one. Think of it as the whiteness of a surface. A
black surface has an albedo of zero meaning that it absorbs all of the light
energy that hits it and reflects none back. A white surface has an albedo
closer to one meaning that it reflects more (or all) of the incoming light
energy. There are two ways that we can relate to this concept; for those
who live in northern climates, think about how bright it is on a sunny day when
the ground is snow covered. Most of the sun's light is being reflected
back and very little is being absorbed by the snow surface (otherwise, it would
melt very quickly). In contrast, in warmer climates, all you need to
remember is how hot a black asphalt surface gets when the sun hits it. The
asphalt absorbs the sun's light energy and it heats up. Now let's go back
to the ocean. The water in the ocean has an albedo of 0.07 meaning that
it reflects back only about 6 percent of the sun's light energy and absorbs the
remaining 94 percent which causes it to heat up. In contrast, sea ice
without snow has an albedo of 0.5 to 0.7 meaning that it reflects 50 to 70
percent of the incoming light energy and generally absorbs less than half,
meaning that it heats up relatively slowly. Sea ice covered with snow has
an even higher albedo of 0.9; in this case, the snow actually acts as an
insulating blanket for the underlying ice because it absorbs only 10 percent of
the sun's light energy. However, once the snow on the ice begins to melt
and form puddles, the albedo drops and the water begins to warm as it absorbs
the incoming light because it has a lower albedo value. These
shallow puddles have an albedo of 0.2 to 0.4 and can drop as low as 0.15 as the
puddles enlarge. Here is another interesting video from an NOAA
stationary camera showing the melting of sea ice and the formation of ponds on
the ice surface in 2011; each few seconds of the clip is another day:
Notice
how the ice retreats from the foreground? The melting would have
progressed further into the months of August and September but the camera
tipped over due to the melting ice. As the albedo increased, the melting
rate increased.
Now,
back to the NOAA report. Here are a series of maps showing the annual ice
extent minimums for several sample years showing how much the area covered has
declined since 1980 with the median ice extent area outlined in magenta:
The
NOAA also notes that the age of the Arctic's sea ice has changed since record
keeping began. In recent years, there has been greater loss of older
(defined as older than four years), thicker and more resilient to melting ice
(shown in white) as exhibited on these maps:
Note
that the area covered by the oldest sea ice reached a minimum in 2011 when
compared to the previous two years. I'd suggest that this does not bode
particularly well for the future since the younger ice is much less resistant to melting.
Now,
let's take a brief look at the changes in water temperature in the Arctic. The summer of 2011 saw water
temperatures over much of the Arctic Ocean rise well above the mean values
experienced between 1982 and 2006. Warmer temperatures (0.5 to 3.0
degrees Celcius) were noted in the area north of Alaska and Canada and even
warmer temperatures (up to 4 and 5 degrees Celcius) were noted north of western
RUssia and Europe as shown on these maps:
The
sea surface temperatures (SST) in 2011, although above the long-term mean, are
still below the highly anomalous temperatures seen in 2007. Unfortunately,
solar radiation penetrates more easily into the upper ocean as the ice cover
thins, resulting in higher water temperatures, both at the surface and at
depth. In the area to the north of Canada, warmer water temperatures have
descended to depths of around 30 metres.
As
melting increases, the chemistry of the ocean's water changes as well. The
water salinity decreases and becomes fresher as melting of both sea ice and
nearby glaciers occurs. The volume of fresh water in parts of the
Beaufort Sea have increased by 25 percent compared to the 1970s. Not only
has the volume of fresh water increased, there has been a change in the
chemistry of the Arctic ocean water as well. The open waters of the
Arctic Ocean can take up increasing volumes of carbon dioxide resulting in more
acidic ocean water than would be the case if the water was ice-covered. This
is problematic for organisms that form their shells from various forms of
calcium carbonate (i.e. calcite and aragonite) as the level of calcium
carbonate in the water is suppressed and the water becomes increasingly
corrosive. Ultimately, these changes will work their way through the food
chain, impacting the survivability of some organisms leading to additional
stress in the Arctic ecosystem.
I
realize that climate change naysayers will refute the conclusions that follow
these observations but I think that it is important that we use the multi-year observations of NOAA's scientists as another series of data points that will
ultimately lead to mankind doing what is right for the environment and putting
the world's ecosystem ahead of corporate profitability and political gain. There is no
doubt, the Arctic ecosystem is changing; whether it is permanent or not, only
time will tell. Let's hope that it's not too late before the finger
pointing stops and governments act to preserve this world for future
generations.
I note none of the youtube links are functional as of 12/12. Must be a denier conspiracy!
ReplyDeleteOdd, they are both working when I try them.
ReplyDeleteBeing that I am from the Midwest in the US - I have seen the results of Ice Ages, much of the geography of my home state was formed by the last one. I question our government's obsession with trying to control something as large as the system that comprises the earth. Seems we should be focusing on things we can control like how to live during an Ice Age or a warming period...10,000 years ago there was a mile thick sheet of ice over my home, now it is gone and seemingly continuing to shrink, just saying...
ReplyDelete@Anonymous...I am also from the Midwest (MI). Our Government isn't trying to do anything about controlling pollution and global warming and neither is China. The environmental agencies are concerned, and I don't mean the EPA which is controlled by Corporations who's profits would diminish if they had to curtail their carbon footprint. It sounds like you want to roll over and let them have their way with you. What makes you think that there will be any energy to keep us warm through another Ice Age? How can the mile high sheet of ice that was over your home, and now gone, continue to shrink? (It's gone!) Global warming is something people are responsible for and thus able to stop contributing to. Try being an environmental activist. Each one of us alone is nothing, together we are everything!
ReplyDeleteIf there was an ice shelf over her home 10,000 years ago and it has melted without the help of mankind,what caused it if man wasn't around? What is your proof the U.S. is doing nothing to controll pollution. Please write back with a non-biased website for people to read that information, I would like to read it
ReplyDeleteCome on, Anonymous! The ice shelf melted because the ice age came to an end. Yes, that was part of a natural cycle. Today, the earth is warming. No, that is not part of a natural cycle. We know the absorbtion spectrum of carbon dioxide. We know that we have burned a trillion tons of carbon in the last century. We know that the carbon dioxide in the atmosphere has increased by about 30% in the last century. Got it?
ReplyDelete