Sea ice drift in the Southern Ocean: Regional patterns, variability, and trends

Understanding long-term changes in large-scale sea ice drift in the Southern Ocean is of considerable interest given its contribution to ice extent, to ice production in open waters, with associated dense water formation and heat flux to the atmosphere, and thus to the climate system. In this paper,...

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Main Authors: Ron Kwok, Shirley S. Pang, Sahra Kacimi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BioOne 2017-06-01
Series:Elementa: Science of the Anthropocene
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.elementascience.org/articles/226
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spelling doaj-d8338ec62b004c289af0c368fa6158c22020-11-24T22:32:26ZengBioOneElementa: Science of the Anthropocene2325-10262017-06-01510.1525/elementa.226174Sea ice drift in the Southern Ocean: Regional patterns, variability, and trendsRon Kwok0Shirley S. Pang1Sahra Kacimi2Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology Pasadena, CaliforniaJet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology Pasadena, CaliforniaJet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology Pasadena, CaliforniaUnderstanding long-term changes in large-scale sea ice drift in the Southern Ocean is of considerable interest given its contribution to ice extent, to ice production in open waters, with associated dense water formation and heat flux to the atmosphere, and thus to the climate system. In this paper, we examine the trends and variability of this ice drift in a 34-year record (1982–2015) derived from satellite observations. Uncertainties in drift (~3 to 4 km day–1) were assessed with higher resolution observations. In a linear model, drift speeds were ~1.4% of the geostrophic wind from reanalyzed sea-level pressure, nearly 50% higher than that of the Arctic. This result suggests an ice cover in the Southern Ocean that is thinner, weaker, and less compact. Geostrophic winds explained all but ~40% of the variance in ice drift. Three spatially distinct drift patterns were shown to be controlled by the location and depth of atmospheric lows centered over the Amundsen, Riiser-Larsen, and Davis seas. Positively correlated changes in sea-level pressures at the three centers (up to 0.64) suggest correlated changes in the wind-driven drift patterns. Seasonal trends in ice edge are linked to trends in meridional winds and also to on-ice/off-ice trends in zonal winds, due to zonal asymmetry of the Antarctic ice cover. Sea ice area export at flux gates that parallel the 1000‐m isobath were extended to cover the 34-year record. Interannual variability in ice export in the Ross and Weddell seas linked to the depth and location of the Amundsen Sea and Riiser-Larsen Sea lows to their east. Compared to shorter records, where there was a significant positive trend in Ross Sea ice area flux, the longer 34-year trends of outflow from both seas are now statistically insignificant.   Copyright: © 2017 California Institute of Technology. U.S. Government sponsorship acknowledged.https://www.elementascience.org/articles/226Southern Oceansea ice driftexportsea ice edge
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ron Kwok
Shirley S. Pang
Sahra Kacimi
spellingShingle Ron Kwok
Shirley S. Pang
Sahra Kacimi
Sea ice drift in the Southern Ocean: Regional patterns, variability, and trends
Elementa: Science of the Anthropocene
Southern Ocean
sea ice drift
export
sea ice edge
author_facet Ron Kwok
Shirley S. Pang
Sahra Kacimi
author_sort Ron Kwok
title Sea ice drift in the Southern Ocean: Regional patterns, variability, and trends
title_short Sea ice drift in the Southern Ocean: Regional patterns, variability, and trends
title_full Sea ice drift in the Southern Ocean: Regional patterns, variability, and trends
title_fullStr Sea ice drift in the Southern Ocean: Regional patterns, variability, and trends
title_full_unstemmed Sea ice drift in the Southern Ocean: Regional patterns, variability, and trends
title_sort sea ice drift in the southern ocean: regional patterns, variability, and trends
publisher BioOne
series Elementa: Science of the Anthropocene
issn 2325-1026
publishDate 2017-06-01
description Understanding long-term changes in large-scale sea ice drift in the Southern Ocean is of considerable interest given its contribution to ice extent, to ice production in open waters, with associated dense water formation and heat flux to the atmosphere, and thus to the climate system. In this paper, we examine the trends and variability of this ice drift in a 34-year record (1982–2015) derived from satellite observations. Uncertainties in drift (~3 to 4 km day–1) were assessed with higher resolution observations. In a linear model, drift speeds were ~1.4% of the geostrophic wind from reanalyzed sea-level pressure, nearly 50% higher than that of the Arctic. This result suggests an ice cover in the Southern Ocean that is thinner, weaker, and less compact. Geostrophic winds explained all but ~40% of the variance in ice drift. Three spatially distinct drift patterns were shown to be controlled by the location and depth of atmospheric lows centered over the Amundsen, Riiser-Larsen, and Davis seas. Positively correlated changes in sea-level pressures at the three centers (up to 0.64) suggest correlated changes in the wind-driven drift patterns. Seasonal trends in ice edge are linked to trends in meridional winds and also to on-ice/off-ice trends in zonal winds, due to zonal asymmetry of the Antarctic ice cover. Sea ice area export at flux gates that parallel the 1000‐m isobath were extended to cover the 34-year record. Interannual variability in ice export in the Ross and Weddell seas linked to the depth and location of the Amundsen Sea and Riiser-Larsen Sea lows to their east. Compared to shorter records, where there was a significant positive trend in Ross Sea ice area flux, the longer 34-year trends of outflow from both seas are now statistically insignificant.   Copyright: © 2017 California Institute of Technology. U.S. Government sponsorship acknowledged.
topic Southern Ocean
sea ice drift
export
sea ice edge
url https://www.elementascience.org/articles/226
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AT shirleyspang seaicedriftinthesouthernoceanregionalpatternsvariabilityandtrends
AT sahrakacimi seaicedriftinthesouthernoceanregionalpatternsvariabilityandtrends
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