4.7 Article

Biogeochemical Impact of Snow Cover and Cyclonic Intrusions on the Winter Weddell Sea Ice Pack

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-OCEANS
Volume 122, Issue 12, Pages 9548-9571

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1002/2017JC013288

Keywords

sea ice; Weddell Sea; Antarctica; biogeochemistry; winter

Categories

Funding

  1. Belgian Science Policy Office project BIGSOUTH [SD/CA/05A]
  2. EU 7th Framework project SIDARUS [262922]
  3. Australian Research Council's Special Research Initiative [SR140300001]
  4. FRS-FNRS
  5. JSPS KAKENHI [12J04175, 17H04715]
  6. Universite Libre de Bruxelles
  7. Alfred-WegenerInstitute
  8. Walter and Andree de Nottbeck Foundation
  9. Onni Talas Foundation
  10. Finnish Antarctic Research Program FINNARP
  11. Quantitative Antarctic Science Program
  12. Australian Antarctic Division
  13. Belgian Fonds National de la Recherche Scientifique (FRS-FNRS) [A 4/5 - MCF/DM - 2657]
  14. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [17H04715] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Sea ice is a dynamic biogeochemical reactor and a double interface actively interacting with both the atmosphere and the ocean. However, proper understanding of its annual impact on exchanges, and therefore potentially on the climate, notably suffer from the paucity of autumnal and winter data sets. Here we present the results of physical and biogeochemical investigations on winter Antarctic pack ice in the Weddell Sea (R. V. Polarstern AWECS cruise, June-August 2013) which are compared with those from two similar studies conducted in the area in 1986 and 1992. The winter 2013 was characterized by a warm sea ice cover due to the combined effects of deep snow and frequent warm cyclones events penetrating southward from the open Southern Ocean. These conditions were favorable to high ice permeability and cyclic events of brine movements within the sea ice cover (brine tubes), favoring relatively high chlorophyll-a (Chl-a) concentrations. We discuss the timing of this algal activity showing that arguments can be presented in favor of continued activity during the winter due to the specific physical conditions. Large-scale sea ice model simulations also suggest a context of increasingly deep snow, warm ice, and large brine fractions across the three observational years, despite the fact that the model is forced with a snowfall climatology. This lends support to the claim that more severe Antarctic sea ice conditions, characterized by a longer ice season, thicker, and more concentrated ice are sufficient to increase the snow depth and, somehow counterintuitively, to warm the ice.

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