Abstract
In this paper, temporal variability and trends of sea ice in the Kara Sea and their correlations with local atmospheric forcing have been quantified and analyzed based on NSDIC SIC dataset and ECMWF ERA-Interim dataset from 1979 to 2017. The sea ice starts to melt in early May and becomes fully frozen at the end of December. The ice melting process is much slower than freezing process. Since 2005, the lowest coverage has been nearly to be 5%, meaning the extensive ice-free condition in summer. The EOF1 patterns of SIC anomaly coincide well with the spatial patterns of trends of SIC. In winter, the whole domain almost remains unchanged and the declining trends are less than −5%/decade but with two high-value regions between −5 and −15%/decade in northwest and southwest. In summer, the sea ice area, extent and relative concentration have been declining significantly with SIC exceeding −15%/decade in the northern part. The decreasing SIC condition is closely sensitive to air temperature over sea surface with correlation coefficients between 0.5 and 1 in the whole domain. Winter accumulative temperature can significantly determine the ice regime in the following melt-freeze period. Correlation coefficients between winter accumulative temperature and melt-freeze sea ice anomaly index, duration of melt-freeze period can up to be −0.85 and 0.77, respectively. Since 2005, the summer sea ice anomaly index becomes closely related to meridional wind with correlation coefficient approaching 0.72. This sea ice motion becomes more sensitive and easily driven by the meridional strong winds when in lower SIC conditions due to the less internal ice stresses.
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