Atlantic water recirculation in the northern Barents Sea affects winter sea ice extent
Finn Ole Heukamp, Claudia Wekerle, Torsten Kanzow, Rebecca McPherson, Till M. Baumann

TL;DR
Weaker ocean currents in the Barents Sea are linked to less sea ice, showing a new factor in Arctic ice loss.
Contribution
Identifies Atlantic Water return-flow as a previously overlooked driver of Barents Sea winter ice decline.
Findings
Atlantic Water return-flow volume transport is strongly correlated with Barents Sea ice area.
Weakened return-flow over 40 years contributes to sustained sea ice loss in the region.
Abstract
Over the past 50 years, Arctic sea ice has declined in all seasons, with particularly pronounced winter reductions in the Barents Sea. While temperature changes in the Atlantic Water inflow and atmospheric-driven melt have been identified as key drivers of this decline, the role of the return-flow of Atlantic Water in the northern Barents Sea Opening, linked to its recirculation back into the Nordic Seas, has remained largely unrecognized. Using a global ocean and sea ice model, we find that the volume transport of the Atlantic Water return-flow is strongly correlated with the sea ice area in the Barents Sea. In addition, we find that, over the past 40 years, the return-flow has steadily weakened without a corresponding change in inflow. Here, we show that reduced Atlantic Water removal by a weakened return-flow contributes to both interannual variability and the sustained loss of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsArctic and Antarctic ice dynamics · Climate variability and models · Oceanographic and Atmospheric Processes
