Abstract

AbstractThis study provides the first estimation of sea ice-melt amount in the Sea of Okhotsk based on spring hydrographic data accumulated for nearly a hundred years. Just after sea ice melts completely, a low-salinity layer appears on the ocean surface, overlying the layer of Winter Water at the freezing point. The integration of the salinity decrease from Winter Water should correspond to the total ice-melt amount. We developed an algorithm to extract the profiles that clearly show the salinity deficit and converted the salinity deficit to the ice-melt amount from all available data. The climatological map shows that ice-melt amount decreases toward the ice edge and exhibits large values around the northern Sakhalin Island, reflecting the ice thickness distribution. In the southern area (south of 48°N), where sea ice is transported from the north, the average ice-melt amount is estimated to be ~ 71 cm in thickness. It is clearly shown that the ice-melt amount has decreased by ~ 30% in the southern area since the 1990s. These changes possibly affect the regional climate through the decreased latent heat of sea ice and potentially affect biological production through weakened stratification caused by decreased ice melt. We also suggested that ice-melt amount did not show a significant trend during the 1930s–1970s, implying that our methodology could extract information on sea ice before the era of satellite observations.

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