The Arctic Is Warming Much Faster Than the Rest of Earth

As climate delegates discuss the planet’s future at the COP25 meeting in Madrid this week, a new study finds the Arctic is warming much faster than the rest of the planet. That’s forcing polar bears and walruses to crowd onto shrinking beaches, starving reindeer and caribou, and driving extreme heat, drought, and sea level rise along the US coast.

Those are some of the results of a new study published today in the journal Science Advances that reports the Arctic has warmed by 0.75 degrees C (1.35 Fahrenheit) in the last decade alone. By comparison, the Earth as a whole has warmed by nearly the same amount, 0.8 degrees C, over the past 137 years.

Under a “business as usual” scenario of industrial emissions that continue at their current rate, the report’s authors say the Arctic Ocean will be ice free in 20 years. By the end of the century, Arctic temperatures will jump a whopping 13 degrees C (23.4 F) during the fall months, when sea ice is at a minimum.

A warming Arctic has consequences for the entire planet, including residents of the United States, according to a panel of 15 climate, oceanography, and wildlife experts from the US, UK and Europe who contributed to the study.

Previous reports have looked at individual aspects of climate change in the polar region, but this was a collaborative effort to examine multiple scientific disciplines to give an updated look at what’s happening and what lies in store in the coming decades.

Kristin Laidre, an animal ecologist at the University of Washington and a coauthor, says the melting summer sea ice is causing trouble for big mammals: polar bears, walruses and seals. She says they are struggling to survive because they can’t hunt, rest, or give birth on floating sea ice.

“They all rely heavily on the sea ice platform for all aspects of their life,” Laidre says. “As we continue to lose ice and see the changes in the ecosystem, we are already seeing big changes and we expect it to continue. There’s no way around that.”

With less sea ice to haul out on, seals and walruses are crowding onto beaches, leading to more trampling deaths of younger animals. Polar bears are swimming longer distances from land to the ice floes where they hunt seals. As the rest of the world’s oceans warm as well, coldwater fish, crustaceans and plankton are moving north to the Arctic. That brings new diseases, parasites, and other threats to the marine life that already lives there, she says.

Climate change is also affecting land mammals like reindeer and caribou that are the main source of food for indigenous peoples of Canada, Siberia, and other Arctic nations. Reindeer are being decimated by rainfall over ice that killed tens of thousands of animals in the past decade. In Greenland, botanists are discovering some flowering plants are emerging earlier each year, but not the pollinating insects they rely on.

And then there’s the weather. Michael Mann, a coauthor of the study and a climate scientist at Penn State, says the disappearing sea ice allows the Arctic ocean to absorb even more sunlight, heating it up even more and melting more ice. “It’s a vicious cycle,” Mann writes in an email.

The accelerated Arctic warming affects weather in the continental US and around the entire Northern Hemisphere by changing the temperature contrast between mid- and high-latitude parts of the globe.

That temperature contrast is what is responsible for the existence of the jet stream; when the contrast shrinks the jet stream tends to slow down. Weather systems tend to linger longer in the same location. It can also cause the undulations of the jet stream to grow in amplitude, which leads to more anomalous weather systems, Mann says.

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