4.7 Article

Future Projections of Antarctic Ice Shelf Melting Based on CMIP5 Scenarios

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLIMATE
Volume 31, Issue 13, Pages 5243-5261

Publisher

AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1175/JCLI-D-17-0854.1

Keywords

Ocean; Antarctica; Southern Ocean; Climate change; Ocean models

Funding

  1. Australian Government scholarship under the Australian Postgraduate Award and Research Training Program schemes
  2. UNSW Research Excellence Award
  3. UNSW Science Silver Star Award
  4. UNSW Gold Star Award
  5. Australian Research Council's Centre of Excellence for Climate System Science
  6. Australian Government's Cooperative Research Centre Programme through the Antarctic Climate and Ecosystems Cooperative Research Centre
  7. Australian Research Council's Special Research Initiative for the Antarctic Gateway Partnership [SRI40300001]
  8. Helmholtz Climate Initiative REKLIM (Regional Climate Change), Helmholtz Association of German Research Centres (HGF)
  9. Earth Science and Climate Change Hub of the Australian Government's National Environmental Science Programme (NESP)
  10. Centre for Southern Hemisphere Oceans Research (CSHOR)
  11. QNLM
  12. CSIRO
  13. UNSW
  14. UTAS

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Basal melting of Antarctic ice shelves is expected to increase during the twenty-first century as the ocean warms, which will have consequences for ice sheet stability and global sea level rise. Here we present future projections of Antarctic ice shelf melting using the Finite Element Sea Ice/Ice-Shelf Ocean Model (FESOM) forced with atmospheric output from models from phase 5 of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP5). CMIP5 models are chosen based on their agreement with historical atmospheric reanalyses over the Southern Ocean; the best-performing models are ACCESS 1.0 and the CMIP5 multimodel mean. Their output is bias-corrected for the representative concentration pathway (RCP) 4.5 and 8.5 scenarios. During the twenty-first-century simulations, total ice shelf basal mass loss increases by between 41% and 129%. Every sector of Antarctica shows increased basal melting in every scenario, with the largest increases occurring in the Amundsen Sea. The main mechanism driving this melting is an increase in warm Circumpolar Deep Water on the Antarctic continental shelf. A reduction in wintertime sea ice formation simulated during the twenty-first century stratifies the water column, allowing a warm bottom layer to develop and intrude into ice shelf cavities. This effect may be overestimated in the Amundsen Sea because of a cold bias in the present-day simulation. Other consequences of weakened sea ice formation include freshening of High Salinity Shelf Water and warming of Antarctic Bottom Water. Furthermore, freshening around the Antarctic coast in our simulations causes the Antarctic Circumpolar Current to weaken and the Antarctic Coastal Current to strengthen.

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