Litcius/Paper detail

Mechanisms Underlying Recent Arctic Atlantification

Helene Asbjørnsen, Marius Årthun, Øystein Skagseth, Tor Eldevik

2020Geophysical Research Letters117 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Recent warming and reduced sea ice concentrations in the Atlantic sector of the Arctic Ocean are the main signatures of ongoing Arctic “Atlantification.” The mechanisms driving the warming trends are nevertheless still debated, particularly regarding the relative importance of oceanic and atmospheric heat fluxes. Here, heat budgets along main Atlantic water pathways through the Barents Sea and Fram Strait are constructed to investigate the mechanisms of Atlantification during 1993–2014. The largest warming trends occur south of the winter ice edge, with ocean advection as the main driver. Warming in the marginal ice zone is mainly due to low surface heat loss from the 1990s to the mid‐2000s. In the ice‐covered northwestern Barents Sea, ocean advection and air‐sea heat fluxes act in concert to drive a gradual warming of the upper ocean. Despite a weakened stratification, no evidence is found of vertical oceanic temperature fluxes driving this upper‐ocean warming.

Topics & Concepts

AdvectionSea iceEnvironmental scienceOceanographyGlobal warmingClimatologyArcticArctic ice packStratification (seeds)Effects of global warming on oceansArctic sea ice declineOcean heat contentGeologyClimate changeThermohaline circulationDrift icePhysicsBotanyDormancySeed dormancyThermodynamicsGerminationBiologyArctic and Antarctic ice dynamicsOceanographic and Atmospheric ProcessesMethane Hydrates and Related Phenomena