The 2007 Bering Strait oceanic heat flux and anomalous Arctic sea-ice retreat
Abstract
To illuminate the role of Pacific Waters in the 2007 Arctic sea-ice retreat, we use observational data to estimate Bering Strait volume and heat transports from 1991 to 2007. In 2007, both annual mean transport and temperatures are at record-length highs. Heat fluxes increase from 2001 to a 2007 maximum, 5-6 × 1020 J/yr. This is twice the 2001 heat flux, comparable to the annual shortwave radiative flux into the Chukchi Sea, and enough to melt 1/3rd of the 2007 seasonal Arctic sea-ice loss. We suggest the Bering Strait inflow influences sea-ice by providing a trigger for the onset of solar-driven melt, a conduit for oceanic heat into the Arctic, and (due to long transit times) a subsurface heat source within the Arctic in winter. The substantial interannual variability reflects temperature and transport changes, the latter (especially recently) being significantly affected by variability (> 0.2 Sv equivalent) in the Pacific-Arctic pressure-head driving the flow.
- Publication:
-
Geophysical Research Letters
- Pub Date:
- January 2010
- DOI:
- 10.1029/2009GL041621
- Bibcode:
- 2010GeoRL..37.1602W
- Keywords:
-
- Geographic Location: Arctic region (0718;
- 4207);
- Oceanography: General: Descriptive and regional oceanography;
- Oceanography: General: Climate and interannual variability (1616;
- 1635;
- 3305;
- 3309;
- 4513);
- Oceanography: Physical: Currents;
- Cryosphere: Sea ice (4540)