Abstract

Abstract The mass balance of the Antarctic ice sheet is intricately linked to the state of the surrounding atmosphere and ocean. As a direct result, improving projections of future sea level change requires understanding change in the Antarctic atmosphere and Southern Ocean, and the processes that couple these systems. Here, we examine the influence of sea ice cover on the overlying atmosphere and subsequently the surface mass balance (SMB) of the adjacent Antarctic ice sheet. We investigate these processes both over the observational era using the ERA5 atmospheric reanalysis and in ensemble simulations of the Community Earth System Model 2.1 (CESM2) where only sea ice coverage is altered. Comparing extreme high and low sea ice over the satellite era in ERA5 reveals atmospheric and ice sheet SMB anomalies that largely mirror anomalies simulated by CESM2 in response to sea ice loss. Results highlight significant near-surface atmospheric warming in response to sea ice reductions that are particularly pronounced in nonsummer seasons and driven by significant ocean-to-atmosphere turbulent heat fluxes. In areas of sea ice loss, significant ocean surface evaporation increases occur. On the eastern flank of climatological low pressure systems, moisture is readily advected toward the ice sheet, driving positive anomalies in the ice sheet SMB. These results indicate that underestimation of Antarctic sea ice, which is common in many current-generation coupled climate models, may lead to overestimation of the ice sheet SMB and therefore underestimation of Antarctica’s contributions to global sea level. Significance Statement The Antarctic ice sheet is the largest potential source of global sea level rise. Its sea level contributions depend in part on how much snow accumulates across its surface. Through observation-incorporating reanalysis data and climate model sensitivity studies, we find that Southern Ocean sea ice coverage exerts an important influence on the near-surface climate and mass balance of the Antarctic ice sheet. Our results show that reductions in Antarctic sea ice promote enhanced ocean surface evaporation and subsequent increases in snowfall across the Antarctic ice sheet. Because current climate models tend to simulate too little Antarctic sea ice, we conclude they may therefore overestimate Antarctic ice sheet snowfall, leading to underprediction of future sea level rise.

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