The Arctic and parts of Antarctica are warming at a much faster rate than the rest of the world. During the 20th century, air temperatures in some parts of the Arctic rose by about 5° Celsius (9° F) – ten times faster than the global average.
In the Antarctic the picture is more complex, but two
major ice shelf collapses over the last decade may be a sign of what's to come.
Other warming signs:
- In the Arctic, ice thickness has declined by over 40 percent, and
an area larger than the Netherlands is disappearing every year.
Scientists predict Arctic sea ice could melt entirely within 70
years.
- The Greenland ice sheet - the biggest ice mass in the Northern Hemisphere - is losing mass from glacier discharge and accelerated summer melting and runoff.
- Melting permafrost is causing trees and buildings to fall down
in the far North. Almost a quarter of all land in the Northern
hemisphere has permafrost under it. As it melts, carbon dioxide and
methane stored in the ground is released.
- The warming in parts of Antarctica has already contributed to a decline of some Adélie and emperor penguin populations.
The consequences of warmingThe
whole Arctic marine ecosystem is tied to the presence and dynamics of
sea ice. The Arctic marine food chain begins with ice algae that clings
to the underside of the ice pack all winter, and creates a dense mat
under the ice in spring. Some arctic species travel halfway around the
world to exploit the food sources that flourish along the edge of the
melting ice.
Removing this dynamic would have profound
consequences for all Arctic life. If the sea ice is drastically reduced
or the timing changed, we can expect the loss of many species that are
reliant upon this special habitat.
Some Arctic animals that depend on sea ice
- Walruses, which travel long distances on floating sea ice that
allowing them to feed over a wide area, may be particularly
vulnerable. In a warmer future, sea ice will likely melt rapidly
in the spring, shrinking quickly over continental shelf areas and
withdrawing to the deep ocean of the central Arctic. This could be
devastating to walrus, as females use sea ice as a platform from
which to feed their young and teach them to feed, primarily on
shellfish from the bottom of shallow continental shelf areas.
- Many species of seal are ice-dependent, including the
spotted seal, which in the Bering Sea breeds exclusively at the ice
edge in spring; the harp seal, which lives at the ice edge all year;
the ringed seal, which give birth to and nurse their pups on sea ice;
the ribbon seal; and the bearded seal.
- Polar bears would be threatened by any decline in ringed
seal populations, their main food source. Moreover, polar bears are
dependent on sea ice for hunting and transportation. The polar bears in
Hudson Bay and James Bay already fast during the four ice-free summer
months they are forced to spend ashore, and pregnant females fast for
eight months. The extension that has already been observed in
this ice-free period has already resulted in decreased birth
rates and will sooner rather than later lead to starvation and
ultimately the extinction of local polar bear populations.
- Sea ice also plays an important role in the Antarctic
ecosystem, particularly as habitat for sea ice algae, the primary food
supply for larval krill over winter. Krill are vital to the
Antarctic food chain. Penguins, fish, sea lions, seals and many
other full time Antarctic residents rely on the ice ecosystem.
Minke whales travel from half the world away to feast on the krill
every spring.
Shrinking ice threatens people and communities
"What I’ve seen over the years is that
there is earlier break up of the ocean, and the ice is getting
much more difficult to hunt on than it used to be."
-- Pete Schaeffer, Kotzebue, Alaska, USA
Cemetery collapsing due to permafrost melting in Alaska.
People
both in and outside of the Arctic circle are at risk from climate
change, but it is the indigenous people of the far North that are
bearing the early brunt of it. Climate change upsets the dynamics of
marine and coastal ecosystems that Native cultures depend on.
Because they rely on wild fish and animals for both cultural and
physical subsistence, these Native peoples are directly tied to local
sea ice ecosystems. They also rely on frozen ice and tundra for travel
and hunting.
In addition, sea ice buffers villages against
storms, and land fast ice helps protect coastlines from erosion. Often,
Native villages are located on riverbanks, coastal bluffs and barrier
islands that provide access to marine resources. A combination of
rising sea levels, decreasing ice, increased erosion and more violent
storms will wipe out villages - displace many Arctic Natives and
forcing them farther from traditional hunting grounds.
More information:Polar bears dream of a white ChristmasProject Thin IceAnswers from the ice edge (pdf)
Arctic Climate Impact Assessment