Tara Polaris expeditions: Sustained decadal observations of the coupled Arctic system in rapid transition
Mathieu Ardyna, Marcel Nicolaus, Marie-No\"elle Houssais, Jean-Christophe Raut, H\'el\`ene Angot (IGE), Kelsey Bisson, Kristina A Brown, J Michel Flores, Pierre E Galand (LECOB, LECOB), Jean-Fran\c{c}ois Ghiglione, Kathy S Law, Fran\c{c}ois Ravetta, Julia Schmale, Jeroen E Sonke

TL;DR
The Tara Polaris program aims to conduct sustained, multi-decadal, multidisciplinary observations of the rapidly changing Arctic system to improve understanding, forecasting, and decision-making regarding its future state.
Contribution
This paper presents a comprehensive plan for a 20-year, multi-season Arctic monitoring program using the Tara Polar Station, integrating ecological, geochemical, biological, and physical data.
Findings
Establishment of a systematic, multi-decadal observation framework.
Identification of key scientific questions and measurement challenges.
Anticipated ability to distinguish long-term trends from variability.
Abstract
The coupled Arctic system is in rapid transition and is set to undergo further dramatic changes over the coming decades. These changes will lead most likely to an ice-free ocean in summer, expected before mid-century. The Arctic will become more strongly influenced by atmospheric and oceanographic processes characteristic of mid-latitudes, increasing the prevalence of contaminants and new biological species. This ongoing transition of the Arctic to a new state necessitates systematic monitoring of all sentinels (variables that make an essential contribution to characterizing the Earth's state) to improve our understanding of the system, enhance forecasting and support knowledge-based decisions. Here, we describe a sustained multi-decadal observation program to be implemented on the Tara Polar Station between 2026 and 2046. The monitoring program is designed as a series of year-long…
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Taxonomy
TopicsArctic and Antarctic ice dynamics · Indigenous Studies and Ecology · Climate change and permafrost
