Arctic climate change: observed and modelled temperature and sea-ice variability

被引:540
作者
Johannessen, OM [1 ]
Bengtsson, L
Miles, MW
Kuzmina, SI
Semenov, VA
Alekseev, GV
Nagurnyi, AP
Zakharov, VF
Bobylev, LP
Pettersson, LH
Hasselmann, K
Cattle, AP
机构
[1] Nansen Environm & Remote Sensing Ctr, Bergen, Norway
[2] Univ Bergen, Inst Geophys, N-5020 Bergen, Norway
[3] Max Planck Inst Meteorol, Hamburg, Germany
[4] Univ Reading, Environm Syst Sci Ctr, Reading RG6 2AH, Berks, England
[5] Bjerknes Ctr Climate Res, Bergen, Norway
[6] Environm Syst Anal Res Ctr, Boulder, CO USA
[7] Nansen Int Environm & Remote Sensing Ctr, St Petersburg, Russia
[8] RAS, Obukhov Inst Atmospher Phys, Moscow 117901, Russia
[9] Arctic & Antarctic Res Inst, St Petersburg 199226, Russia
[10] Hadley Ctr Climate Predict & Res, Bracknell, Berks, England
关键词
D O I
10.1111/j.1600-0870.2004.00060.x
中图分类号
P4 [大气科学(气象学)];
学科分类号
0706 ; 070601 ;
摘要
Changes apparent in the arctic climate system in recent years require evaluation in a century-scale perspective in order to assess the Arctic's response to increasing anthropogenic greenhouse-gas forcing. Here, a new set of century- and multidecadal-scale observational data of surface air temperature (SAT) and sea ice is used in combination with ECHAM4 and HadCM3 coupled atmosphere-ice-ocean global model simulations in order to better determine and understand arctic climate variability. We show that two pronounced twentieth-century warming events, both amplified in the Arctic, were linked to sea-ice variability. SAT observations and model simulations indicate that the nature of the arctic warming in the last two decades is distinct from the early twentieth-century warm period. It is suggested strongly that the earlier warming was natural internal climate-system variability, whereas the recent SAT changes are a response to anthropogenic forcing. The area of arctic sea ice is furthermore observed to have decreased similar to8 x 10(5) km(2) (7.4%) in the past quarter century, with record-low summer ice coverage in September 2002. A set of model predictions is used to quantify changes in the ice cover through the twenty-first century, with greater reductions expected in summer than winter. In summer, a predominantly sea-ice-free Arctic is predicted for the end of this century.
引用
收藏
页码:328 / 341
页数:14
相关论文
共 84 条
[1]   Interannual variability in water masses in the Greenland Sea and adjacent areas [J].
Alekseev, GV ;
Johannessen, OM ;
Korablev, AA ;
Ivanov, VV ;
Kovalevsky, DV .
POLAR RESEARCH, 2001, 20 (02) :201-208
[2]  
ALEKSEEV GV, 1991, NATURAL VARIABILITY
[3]  
ALEKSEEV GV, 2000, PROBLEM HYDROMETEORO
[4]  
ALEKSEEV GV, 1999, DETECTION MODELLING
[5]   Carbon fluxes in the Arctic Ocean - potential impact by climate change [J].
Anderson, LG ;
Kaltin, S .
POLAR RESEARCH, 2001, 20 (02) :225-232
[6]   Reorganization of North Atlantic marine copepod biodiversity and climate [J].
Beaugrand, G ;
Reid, PC ;
Ibañez, F ;
Lindley, JA ;
Edwards, M .
SCIENCE, 2002, 296 (5573) :1692-1694
[7]  
BENGTSSON L, 1999, MODELING EARTHS CLIM
[8]  
BENGTSSON L, 2004, IN PRESS J CLIMATE
[9]   Analysis of merged SMMR-SSMI time series of Arctic and Antarctic sea ice parameters 1978-1995 [J].
Bjorgo, E ;
Johannessen, OM ;
Miles, MW .
GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 1997, 24 (04) :413-416
[10]  
BJORK G, 2002, J GEOPHYS RES, V107, DOI DOI 10.1029/2000JD000723