Replacement of multiyear sea ice and changes in the open water season duration in the Beaufort Sea since 2004

The last decade has witnessed the nine lowest Arctic September sea ice extents in the observational record. It also forms the most recent third of the long-term trend in that record, which reached -13.4% decade -1 in 2015. While hemispheric analyses paint a compelling picture of sea ice loss across...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans
Main Authors: Galley, Ryan, Babb, D., Ogi, Masayo, Else, B. G T, Geilfus, Nicolas-Xavier, Crabeck, O., Barber, David G, Rysgaard, Søren
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pure.au.dk/portal/en/publications/0ccb17d9-5c1b-4613-824a-549a0621efcd
https://doi.org/10.1002/2015JC011583
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Summary:The last decade has witnessed the nine lowest Arctic September sea ice extents in the observational record. It also forms the most recent third of the long-term trend in that record, which reached -13.4% decade -1 in 2015. While hemispheric analyses paint a compelling picture of sea ice loss across the Arctic, the situation with multiyear ice in the Beaufort Sea is particularly dire. This study was undertaken in light of substantial changes that have occurred in the extent of summer multiyear sea ice in the Arctic inferred from the passive microwave record. To better elucidate these changes at a sub-regional scale, we use data from the Canadian Ice Service archive, the most direct observations of sea ice stage-of-development available. We also build upon the only previous sea ice climatological analysis for Canada's western Arctic region by sea ice stage-of-development that ended in 2004. The annual evolution of sea ice by stage of development in Canada's western Arctic changed dramatically between 1983 and 2014. The rate of these changes and their spatial prevalence were most prominent in the last decade. In summer, total sea ice loss occurred via reductions in old and first-year sea ice over increasingly large areas and over more months per year. Resultant delay of thermodynamic freeze up has increased the annual open water duration in the study region. The winter sea ice cover was increasingly composed of first-year sea ice at the expense of old ice. Breakup timing has not significantly changed in the region.