Environment & Energy
Related: About this forum"Profound" Impacts Across The Arctic In Record Heat 0f 2015; 70% Of March Sea Ice 1 Year Old
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The latest National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Noaa) report card on the state of the Arctic revealed the annual average air temperature was 1.3C (2.3F) above the long-term average the highest since modern records began in 1900. In some parts of the icy region, the temperature exceeded 3C (5.4F) above the average, taken from 1981 to 2010.
This record heat has been accompanied by diminishing ice. The Arctic Ocean reached its peak ice cover on 25 February a full 15 days earlier than the long-term average and the lowest extent recorded since records began in 1979. The minimum ice cover, which occurred on 11 September, was the fourth smallest in area on record. More than 50% of Greenlands huge ice sheet experienced melting in 2015, with 22 of the 45 widest and fastest-flowing glaciers shrinking in comparison to their 2014 extent.
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Overland said if the world hits the 2C (3.6F) warming limit agreed by nations in the recent Paris climate talks, the Arctic will experience a 4C (7.2F) to 5C (9F) increase in temperature by 2050. The Chukchi Sea, by Alaska, is warming the fastest of any of the Arctic waters while the overall minimum ice extent has slumped by 13.4% a decade, on average.
The changes in the Arctic are also causing major challenges for the indigenous communities in the region, according to Rick Spinrad, Noaas chief scientist. Warmer-water fish such as cod are moving north, displacing Arctic species, while an increase in sunlight reaching the upper layers of the ocean triggered widespread blooms of algae in the Bering Sea, between Alaska and Russia, in 2015. This altered environment is causing severe problems for walruses, with unprecedented haul outs of the animals occurring in 2015. The large marine mammals traditionally use sea ice for mating and nurturing young but in recent years have been forced to congregate on land in north-west Alaska. This behaviour has led to stampedes that have killed calves and hampered walruses ability to find food.
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http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/dec/15/arctic-noaa-report-record-high-temperatures-diminishing-sea-ice
dhill926
(16,348 posts)and yet we fiddle while the earth burns....
OnlinePoker
(5,723 posts)So better than 2008-2013 then. The issue is ice thickness, not ice extent.
http://nsidc.org/soac/sea-ice-age-year.html#seaiceagesequential