Arctic Report Card 2011

The Arctic Report Card (www.arctic.noaa.gov/reportcard/) considers a wide range of environmental observations throughout the Arctic, and is updated annually. A major conclusion of the 2011 Report is that there are now a sufficient number of years of data to indicate a shift in the Arctic Ocean syste...

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Bibliographic Details
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: NOAA
Subjects:
Ice
Online Access:http://library.arcticportal.org/1739/
http://library.arcticportal.org/1739/1/report_Card_2011.pdf
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spelling ftarcticportal:oai:generic.eprints.org:1739 2023-05-15T14:21:23+02:00 Arctic Report Card 2011 application/pdf http://library.arcticportal.org/1739/ http://library.arcticportal.org/1739/1/report_Card_2011.pdf en eng NOAA http://library.arcticportal.org/1739/1/report_Card_2011.pdf Unspecified Arctic Report Card 2011. Project Report. NOAA. Atmosphere Oceans Monograph NonPeerReviewed ftarcticportal 2022-03-24T20:15:47Z The Arctic Report Card (www.arctic.noaa.gov/reportcard/) considers a wide range of environmental observations throughout the Arctic, and is updated annually. A major conclusion of the 2011 Report is that there are now a sufficient number of years of data to indicate a shift in the Arctic Ocean system since 2006. This shifted is characterized by the persistent decline in the thickness and summer extent of the sea ice cover, and a warmer, fresher upper ocean. As a result of increased open water area, biological productivity at the base of the marine food chain has increased and sea ice-dependent marine mammals continue to lose habitat. Increases in the greenness of tundra vegetation and permafrost temperatures are linked to warmer land temperatures in coastal regions, often adjacent to the areas of greatest sea ice retreat. A second key point in the 2011 Report is the repeated occurrence of 2010 Arctic winter wind patterns that mark a departure from the norm. These changes resulted in higher than normal temperatures in the Arctic, with record ice sheet mass loss, record low late spring snow cover in Eurasia, shorter lake ice duration, and unusually lower temperatures and snow storms in some low latitude regions. A potential indicator of recent atmospheric changes was record low ozone concentrations in March 2011. The 2011 Report Card shows that record-setting changes are occurring throughout the Arctic environmental system. Given the projection of continued global warming, it is very likely that major Arctic changes will continue in years to come, with increasing climatic, biological and social impacts. Book Arctic Arctic Arctic Ocean Global warming Ice Ice Sheet permafrost Sea ice Tundra Arctic Portal Library Arctic Arctic Ocean
institution Open Polar
collection Arctic Portal Library
op_collection_id ftarcticportal
language English
topic Atmosphere
Oceans
spellingShingle Atmosphere
Oceans
Arctic Report Card 2011
topic_facet Atmosphere
Oceans
description The Arctic Report Card (www.arctic.noaa.gov/reportcard/) considers a wide range of environmental observations throughout the Arctic, and is updated annually. A major conclusion of the 2011 Report is that there are now a sufficient number of years of data to indicate a shift in the Arctic Ocean system since 2006. This shifted is characterized by the persistent decline in the thickness and summer extent of the sea ice cover, and a warmer, fresher upper ocean. As a result of increased open water area, biological productivity at the base of the marine food chain has increased and sea ice-dependent marine mammals continue to lose habitat. Increases in the greenness of tundra vegetation and permafrost temperatures are linked to warmer land temperatures in coastal regions, often adjacent to the areas of greatest sea ice retreat. A second key point in the 2011 Report is the repeated occurrence of 2010 Arctic winter wind patterns that mark a departure from the norm. These changes resulted in higher than normal temperatures in the Arctic, with record ice sheet mass loss, record low late spring snow cover in Eurasia, shorter lake ice duration, and unusually lower temperatures and snow storms in some low latitude regions. A potential indicator of recent atmospheric changes was record low ozone concentrations in March 2011. The 2011 Report Card shows that record-setting changes are occurring throughout the Arctic environmental system. Given the projection of continued global warming, it is very likely that major Arctic changes will continue in years to come, with increasing climatic, biological and social impacts.
format Book
title Arctic Report Card 2011
title_short Arctic Report Card 2011
title_full Arctic Report Card 2011
title_fullStr Arctic Report Card 2011
title_full_unstemmed Arctic Report Card 2011
title_sort arctic report card 2011
publisher NOAA
url http://library.arcticportal.org/1739/
http://library.arcticportal.org/1739/1/report_Card_2011.pdf
geographic Arctic
Arctic Ocean
geographic_facet Arctic
Arctic Ocean
genre Arctic
Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Global warming
Ice
Ice Sheet
permafrost
Sea ice
Tundra
genre_facet Arctic
Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Global warming
Ice
Ice Sheet
permafrost
Sea ice
Tundra
op_relation http://library.arcticportal.org/1739/1/report_Card_2011.pdf
Unspecified Arctic Report Card 2011. Project Report. NOAA.
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