
Impact of melt ponds on Arctic sea ice in past and future climates as simulated by MPI‐ESM
Author(s) -
Roeckner Erich,
Mauritsen Thorsten,
Esch Monika,
Brokopf Renate
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
journal of advances in modeling earth systems
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.03
H-Index - 58
ISSN - 1942-2466
DOI - 10.1029/2012ms000157
Subject(s) - sea ice , arctic sea ice decline , arctic ice pack , arctic geoengineering , climatology , arctic , cryosphere , oceanography , antarctic sea ice , melt pond , ice albedo feedback , sea ice concentration , environmental science , geology , archipelago , sea ice thickness
The impact of melt ponds on Arctic sea ice is estimated from model simulations of the historical and future climate. The simulations were performed with and without the effect of melt ponds on sea ice melt, respectively. In the last thirty years of the historical simulations, melt ponds develop predominantly in the continental shelf regions and in the Canadian archipelago. Accordingly, the ice albedo in these regions is systematically smaller than in the no‐pond simulations, the sea ice melt is enhanced, and both the ice concentration and ice thickness during the September minimum are reduced. Open ponds decrease the ice albedo, resulting in enhanced ice melt, less sea ice and further pond growth. This positive feedback entails a more realistic representation of the seasonal cycle of Northern Hemisphere sea ice area. Under the premise that the observed decline of Arctic sea ice over the period of modern satellite observations is mainly externally driven and, therefore, potentially predictable, both model versions underestimate the decline in Arctic sea ice. This presupposition, however, is challenged by our model simulations which show a distinct modulation of the downward Arctic sea ice trends by multidecadal variability. At longer time scales, an impact of pond activation on Arctic sea ice trends is more evident: In the Representative Concentration Pathway scenario RCP45, the September sea ice is projected to vanish by the end of the 21 st century. In the active‐pond simulation, this happens up to two decades earlier than in the no‐pond simulations.