Abstract

The recent increase in Atlantic and Pacific ocean heat transports has led to a decrease in Arctic sea-ice area and volume. As the respective contributions from both oceans in driving sea-ice loss is still uncertain, our study explores this. We use the EC-Earth3 coupled global climate model and perform different sensitivity experiments to gain insights into the relationships between ocean heat transport and Arctic sea ice. In these model experiments, the sea-surface temperature is artificially increased in different regions of the North Atlantic and North Pacific Oceans and with different levels of warming. All the experiments lead to enhanced ocean heat transport, and consequently to a decrease in Arctic sea-ice area and volume. We show that the wider the domain in which the sea-surface temperature is increased and the larger the level of warming, the larger the increase in ocean heat transport and the stronger the decrease in Arctic sea-ice area and volume. We also find that for a same amount of ocean heat transport increase, the reductions in Arctic sea-ice area and volume are stronger when the sea-surface temperature increase is imposed in the North Pacific, compared to the North Atlantic. This is explained by the lower-salinity water at the Bering Strait and atmospheric warming of the North Atlantic Ocean in the Pacific experiments. Finally, we find that the sea-ice loss is mainly driven by reduced basal growth along the sea-ice edge and enhanced basal melt in the Central Arctic. This confirms that the ocean heat transport is the primary driver of Arctic sea-ice loss in our experiments.

Highlights

  • In the current global warming context, Arctic sea ice has dramatically changed over the past decades

  • The seasonal cycles of Arctic sea-ice area and volume are relatively similar in the two wide domain experiments (ATL1 and PAC1, Fig. 6). This suggests that there is no substantial difference in sea ice whether the seasurface temperature (SST) anomaly is imposed in the Atlantic or the Pacific Ocean

  • We have analyzed the results from 18 different sensitivity experiments and one present-day control run conducted with the coupled global climate model EC-Earth3

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Summary

Introduction

In the current global warming context, Arctic sea ice has dramatically changed over the past decades. Between 1979 and 2018, the sea-ice extent has decreased at a rate of 83,000 km yr−1 at the end of summer and 41,000 km yr−1 at the end of winter (Meredith et al 2019). This rate of extent decrease is unprecedented in the record back to 1850, especially for summer (Walsh et al 2017). Arctic sea ice has thinned by 1.5–2 m since 1980 (Lindsay and Schweiger 2015; Kwok 2018). Following the decrease in sea-ice extent and thickness, the Arctic sea-ice volume loss over

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