The effects of precipitation and river runoff in a coupled ice-ocean model of the Arctic

Abstract. A coupled ice-ocean model of the Arctic is developed in order to study the effects of precipitation and river runoff on sea ice. A dynamic-thermodynamic sea ice model is coupled to an ocean general circulation model which includes a turbulent closure scheme for vertical mixing. The model is forced by interannually varying atmospheric temperature and pressure data from 1980–1989, and spatially varying mean monthly precipitation and river runoffs. Salinity and fresh water fluxes to the ocean from ice growth, snow melt, rain, and runoffs are computed, with no artificial constraints on the ocean salinity. The modeled ice thickness is similar to the observed pattern, with the thickest ice remaining against the Canadian Archipelago throughout the year. The modeled ice drift reproduces the Beaufort gyre and Transpolar drift exiting through Fram Strait. The stable arctic halocline produced by the vertical mixing scheme isolates the surface from the Atlantic layer and reduces the vertical fluxes of heat and salinity. A sensitivity experiment with zero precipitation results in rapidly decreasing ice thickness, in response to greater ocean heat flux from a weakening of the halocline, while an experiment with doubled precipitation results in a smaller increase in ice thickness. A zero-runoff experiment results in a slower decrease in ice thickness than the zero-precipitation case, due to the decadal time scale of the transport of runoff in the model. The results suggest that decadal trends in both arctic precipitation and river runoffs, caused either by anthropogenic or natural climatic change, have the potential to exert broad-scale impacts on the arctic sea ice regime.

[1]  L. Mysak,et al.  Simulation of the mixed-layer circulation in the Arctic Ocean , 1996 .

[2]  W. Washington,et al.  A large-scale numerical model of sea ice , 1979 .

[3]  L. Mysak,et al.  Sea-ice anomalies observed in the Greenland and Labrador seas during 1901–1984 and their relation to an interdecadal Arctic climate cycle , 1990 .

[4]  S. Levitus Climatological Atlas of the World Ocean , 1982 .

[5]  K. Bryan Accelerating the Convergence to Equilibrium of Ocean-Climate Models , 1984 .

[6]  W. Hibler A Dynamic Thermodynamic Sea Ice Model , 1979 .

[7]  G. Mellor,et al.  Development of a turbulence closure model for geophysical fluid problems , 1982 .

[8]  David M. Holland,et al.  Sensitivity study of a dynamic thermodynamic sea ice model , 1993 .

[9]  John E. Walsh,et al.  An Assessment of Global Climate Model Simulations of Arctic Air Temperatures , 1996 .

[10]  T. Wigley,et al.  Northern Hemisphere Surface Air Temperature Variations: 1851–1984 , 1986 .

[11]  George L. Mellor,et al.  Modeling the seasonal variability of a coupled Arctic ice‐ocean system , 1992 .

[12]  L. Mysak,et al.  Arctic Sea‐Ice extent and anomalies, 1953–1984 , 1989 .

[13]  E. Carmack,et al.  On the halocline of the Arctic Ocean , 1981 .

[14]  A. Semtner,et al.  A Numerical Study of Sea Ice and Ocean Circulation in the Arctic , 1987 .

[15]  K. Aagaard,et al.  Toward an ice‐free Arctic ocean , 1975 .

[16]  K. Bryan,et al.  A Diagnostic Ice–Ocean Model , 1987 .

[17]  A. Semtner,et al.  A numerical study of interannual ocean forcing on Arctic ice , 1991 .

[18]  G. Meehl,et al.  Characteristics of coupled atmosphere-ocean CO2 sensitivity experiments with different ocean formulations , 1991 .

[19]  K. Bryan A Numerical Method for the Study of the Circulation of the World Ocean , 1997 .

[20]  John E. Walsh,et al.  Multiyear sea ice in the Arctic: Model‐ and satellite‐derived , 1990 .

[21]  Donald J. Cavalieri,et al.  Arctic and Antarctic Sea Ice, 1978-1987: Satellite Passive-Microwave Observations and Analysis , 1992 .

[22]  A. Semtner A MODEL FOR THE THERMODYNAMIC GROWTH OF SEA ICE IN NUMERICAL INVESTIGATIONS OF CLIMATE , 1975 .

[23]  G. Maykut,et al.  Numerical Prediction of the Thermodynamic Response of Arctic Sea Ice to Environmental Changes , 1969 .

[24]  J. Walsh,et al.  Arctic Contribution to Upper-Ocean Variability in the North Atlantic , 1990 .

[25]  R. Colony,et al.  An estimate of the mean field of Arctic sea ice motion , 1984 .

[26]  R. Dickson,et al.  The great salinity anomaly in the northern North Atlantic 1968-1982 , 1988 .

[27]  Roger G. Barry,et al.  The Arctic sea ice-climate system: observations and modeling , 1993 .

[28]  R. Bourke,et al.  Contour mapping of Arctic basin ice draft and roughness parameters , 1992 .

[29]  J. Walsh,et al.  Atmospheric contribution to hydrologic variations in the Arctic , 1994 .

[30]  J. Sacks,et al.  Artic sea ice variability: Model sensitivities and a multidecadal simulation , 1994 .