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Published byJanel Mitchell Modified over 9 years ago
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A Major Climate/Ecosystem Shift Observed in the Northern Bering Sea James E. Overland1, Jacqueline M. Grebmeier2, Sue E. Moore3, Ed V. Farley4, Eddy C. Carmack5, L.W. Cooper2, K E. Frey.6, J.H, Helle4, F.A. McLaughlin5, S. Lyn McNutt7, Phyllis Stabeno1 1 NOAA/Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory, Seattle, WA, james.e.overland@noaa.gov 2 The University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN 3NOAA/NMFS, Alaska Fisheries Science Center, Seattle, WA 4 NOAA/NMFS, Auke Bay Laboratory, Juneau, AK 5Institute of Ocean Sciences,, Sidney, Canada 6 Department of Geography, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 7University of Alaska Fairbanks, Fairbanks, AK
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POSTERS Igor Belkin Bering Sea Frontal Pattern Douglas Dasher Aleutian Islands, Coastal Environmental Monitoring Assessment Program
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Recent loss of sea ice in southern Bering Sea –Spring 2000-2005
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Vertically Averaged Temperature (°C) at M2: 2 deg C increase in winter after 2000 Above freezing point Stabeno
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Southern Bering Sea Ecosystem Changes 1999 2003 Warm temperatures favor pollock over Arctic species
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Northern Bering Sea Ice Concentration ( Aprils 2000-2004) and St. Lawrence Temperature Changes Coming out in Science
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Change in Benthic Biology SW of St. Lawrence Island -Grebmeier
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10 M new Salmon in the N. Bering Sea in 2004- following increase northward movement of pollock - Helle
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[M. Webber-USFWS] Walrus herd in the Chukchi Sea– June 2002 Schematic of food web in the northern Bering and Chukchi Seas [Grebmeier and Dunton 2000] Clam food in walrus stomachs [photos courtesy G. Sheffield]
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Persistent Arctic Changes Overland and Wang 2005a Wang and Overland 2004 Sea Ice Decreasing Sept 2003 -4 -2 0 2 4 deg C Warm Surface Temperatures Tundra shown in Pink From NSIDC Tundra Decreasing
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Arctic Oscillation (AO) Index Thompson and Wallace, 1998 Geo. Res. Let. EOF 1 Sea Level Pressure
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Temperature Anomalies 1977-1988 (PNA+ ) 1989-1995 (AO+) 1996-2004 (Arctic Warm) Pacific North American Arctic Oscillation Climate Patterns
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New Climate Pattern Air Temperature Wind/Pressure fields Overland and Wang, GRL, 2005b
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It’s too warm! Future: Continued ice reductions due to Arctic feedback processes (winds, clouds, ocean currents) Or: Shift to different climate pattern within next 5 years with eventual return to warm pattern Thanks for support from NOAA Arctic Research Program North Pacific Research Board
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Spotted seals are found much further in from the ice edge 300 km vs. 25 km
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