Daniel1960, on 2015-July-31, 10:06, said:
Some of the possibilities include: decreased ocean temperatures, increased snowfall, wind variations, ozone forcing, atmospheric dynamics, and an increase in polynyas. The authors also list measurement error as a possibility. They did not eliminate global warming as a possible explanation, but insists that sea ice should decline over the long term - at least according to the models.
I asked for a list of the "many possibilities stated in the article" for which global warming is
not responsible. Let's look again at what
the article that you want us all to read says about "decreased ocean temperatures."
Quote
Changes to sea surface temperatures
As the glaciers and ice shelves melt on the Antarctic continent, freshwater is added to the oceans. This layer of cold, fresh water on the ocean surface freezes easily [10]. When combined with increased ocean stratification due to this enhanced run off [11], sea-surface temperatures are depressed, encouraging sea-ice formation.
A recent modeling study has shown that increases in fresh meltwater flux from melting glaciers and ice caps on Antarctica under various IPCC standardized global warming scenarios offsets the decline in sea-ice area and to even further encourage the increases in sea-ice extent, especially in winter (in summer, air temperatures are too high to support significant sea-ice growth) [12].
Increased stratification has further implications. Suppression of ocean circulation overturning decreases the ocean heat flux available to melt ice, leading to an increase in net ice production[13].
As
global warming accelerates the freshwater melt from Antarctic glaciers, the resulting decrease in ocean temperatures (along with the lower salinity of the glacial melt) expands the surrounding sea ice. It has always been understood that this would happen on the way to equilibrium but, until the past few years, had been considered too obvious to point out.
What about "increased snowfall?"
Quote
Increased precipitation
Warmer air holds more moisture, and so precipitation is increasing around Antarctica [13]. Strong warming in the middle latitudes of the Southern Ocean can lead to an enhanced hydrological cycle, with enhanced evaporation and moisture content in the lower troposphere [14]. This additional moisture is transported poleward, where it results in increased precipitation. Increases in snow and rain falling onto the ocean contribute to the freshening of the ocean surface in the high latitudes of the Southern Ocean. Fresher, colder water freezes more easily, so this mechanism may contribute to the growth in area of Antarctic sea ice.
Furthermore, the increased weight of snow on the sea ice may force it deeper into the water, forming thicker sea ice when the snow refreezes. Deeper snow also insulates the ice, protecting it from melting [15].
As
global warming produces more moisture-laden air, the Antarctic snowfall increases.
But what about "wind variations, ozone forcing, atmospheric dynamics, and an increase in polynyas?"
Quote
Wind and movement
Changes in atmospheric dynamics and winds are an important driver of regional sea-ice trends. Ozone and greenhouse forcings cool the Antarctic stratosphere, which increases the stratospheric vortex and tropospheric zonal winds. This results in an increase in the Southern Annular Mode [6]. Increases in the Southern Annular Mode (SAM) signify increased westerly winds [7] and a rigorous isolation and cooling of parts of the Antarctic continent [6].
Because the Arctic is a semi-enclosed ocean, there is little scope for sea ice movement. Ice in the Arctic is thicker as a result of collisions, which means that the ice will last longer. This means that much of the Arctic sea ice lasts for several seasons, leading to permanent ice cover at the pole. However, in the Antarctic, there are far fewer such constraints. The sea ice is able to move around far more freely. It floats northwards to warmer waters, where it melts away almost entirely. Changes in the winds around Antarctica therefore change ice-concentration trends around Antarctica [8] by influencing sea-ice production and melt rates [9]. The pattern of wind change is complex, but variations in winds can help to explain some of the regional patterns in sea-ice formation [8]. Where the wind blows to the north, the sea ice is blown north where it melts, resulting in increased sea-ice extent. Where the winds blow south, the sea ice is blown towards the continent, resulting in decreased sea-ice concentrations.
Polynyas are areas of persistently open water in regions where sea ice is usual. The water remains unfrozen as a result of processes that either prevent ice from forming or that move ice out of the area. Polynyas are therefore an important part of sea-ice production. An increase in the extent of polynyas in the Ross Sea from 1978 to 2008 contributed to sea ice production [2]. The resulting increased ice export accounts for a large proportion of the increased trend in ice production. Changes in wind circulation alter ice production and export in and from these polynyas.
Greenhouse forcing (which you "accidentally" left out) and
ozone forcing are types of
radiative forcing, the name for the "heating effect caused by greenhouse gases in the atmosphere." See
Climate Change Indicators in the United States. And radiative forcing, as the article you want us all to read points out, does lead to changes in wind and ice movement. However, one can't maintain (with a straight face) that the article even hints that the changes caused by radiative forcing are not the result of global warming.
I'm pretty sure that everyone understands that as global warming continues, the ice sheets will decline over the long term. Over the short term, as the article points out,
global warming is causing the increase in Antarctic sea ice in several ways. Predominant, though, is the accelerating ice melt from Antarctic glaciers.
The growth of wisdom may be gauged exactly by the diminution of ill temper. — Friedrich Nietzsche
The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists — that is why they invented hell. — Bertrand Russell