Climate variability and physical forcing of the food webs and the carbon budget on panarctic shelves

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Standard

Climate variability and physical forcing of the food webs and the carbon budget on panarctic shelves. / Carmack, Eddy; Barber, David; Christensen, Jens; Macdonald, Robie; Rudels, Bert; Sakshaug, Egil.

I: Progress in Oceanography, Bind 71, Nr. 2-4, 01.10.2006, s. 145-181.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Carmack, E, Barber, D, Christensen, J, Macdonald, R, Rudels, B & Sakshaug, E 2006, 'Climate variability and physical forcing of the food webs and the carbon budget on panarctic shelves', Progress in Oceanography, bind 71, nr. 2-4, s. 145-181. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pocean.2006.10.005

APA

Carmack, E., Barber, D., Christensen, J., Macdonald, R., Rudels, B., & Sakshaug, E. (2006). Climate variability and physical forcing of the food webs and the carbon budget on panarctic shelves. Progress in Oceanography, 71(2-4), 145-181. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pocean.2006.10.005

Vancouver

Carmack E, Barber D, Christensen J, Macdonald R, Rudels B, Sakshaug E. Climate variability and physical forcing of the food webs and the carbon budget on panarctic shelves. Progress in Oceanography. 2006 okt. 1;71(2-4):145-181. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pocean.2006.10.005

Author

Carmack, Eddy ; Barber, David ; Christensen, Jens ; Macdonald, Robie ; Rudels, Bert ; Sakshaug, Egil. / Climate variability and physical forcing of the food webs and the carbon budget on panarctic shelves. I: Progress in Oceanography. 2006 ; Bind 71, Nr. 2-4. s. 145-181.

Bibtex

@article{507bdb828aac4863a2423c1e8172f314,
title = "Climate variability and physical forcing of the food webs and the carbon budget on panarctic shelves",
abstract = "Brief overviews of the Arctic's atmosphere, ice cover, circulation, primary production and sediment regime are given to provide a conceptual framework for considering panarctic shelves under scenarios of climate variability. We draw on past 'regional' studies to scale-up to the panarctic perspective. Within each discipline a synthesis of salient distributions and processes is given, and then functions are noted that are critically poised and/or near transition and thereby sensitive to climate variability and change. The various shelf regions are described and distinguished among three types: inflow shelves, interior shelves and outflow shelves. Emphasis is on projected climate changes that will likely have the greatest impact on shelf-basin exchange, productivity and sediment processes including (a) changes in wind fields (e.g. currents, ice drift, upwelling and downwelling); (b) changes in sea ice distribution (e.g. radiation and wind regimes, enhanced upwelling and mixing, ice transport and scour resuspension, primary production); and (c) changes in hydrology (e.g. sediment and organic carbon delivery, nutrient supplies). A discussion is given of the key rate-controlling processes, which differ for different properties and shelf types, as do the likely responses; that is, the distributions of nutrients, organic carbon, freshwater, sediments, and trace minerals will all respond differently to climate forcing. A fundamental conclusion is that the changes associated with light, nutrients, productivity and ice cover likely will be greatest at the shelf-break and margins, and that this forms a natural focus for a coordinated international effort. Recognizing that the real value of climate research is to prepare society for possible futures, and that such research must be based both on an understanding of the past (e.g. the palaeo-record) as well as an ability to reliably predict future scenarios (e.g. validated models), two recommendations emerge: firstly, a comprehensive survey of circumpolar shelf-break and slope sediments would provide long-term synchronous records of shelf-interior ocean exchange and primary production at the shelf edge; secondly, a synoptic panarctic ice and ocean survey using heavy icebreakers, aircraft, moorings and satellites would provide the validation data and knowledge required to properly model key forcing processes at the margins.",
author = "Eddy Carmack and David Barber and Jens Christensen and Robie Macdonald and Bert Rudels and Egil Sakshaug",
year = "2006",
month = oct,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1016/j.pocean.2006.10.005",
language = "English",
volume = "71",
pages = "145--181",
journal = "Progress in Oceanography",
issn = "0079-6611",
publisher = "Pergamon Press",
number = "2-4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Climate variability and physical forcing of the food webs and the carbon budget on panarctic shelves

AU - Carmack, Eddy

AU - Barber, David

AU - Christensen, Jens

AU - Macdonald, Robie

AU - Rudels, Bert

AU - Sakshaug, Egil

PY - 2006/10/1

Y1 - 2006/10/1

N2 - Brief overviews of the Arctic's atmosphere, ice cover, circulation, primary production and sediment regime are given to provide a conceptual framework for considering panarctic shelves under scenarios of climate variability. We draw on past 'regional' studies to scale-up to the panarctic perspective. Within each discipline a synthesis of salient distributions and processes is given, and then functions are noted that are critically poised and/or near transition and thereby sensitive to climate variability and change. The various shelf regions are described and distinguished among three types: inflow shelves, interior shelves and outflow shelves. Emphasis is on projected climate changes that will likely have the greatest impact on shelf-basin exchange, productivity and sediment processes including (a) changes in wind fields (e.g. currents, ice drift, upwelling and downwelling); (b) changes in sea ice distribution (e.g. radiation and wind regimes, enhanced upwelling and mixing, ice transport and scour resuspension, primary production); and (c) changes in hydrology (e.g. sediment and organic carbon delivery, nutrient supplies). A discussion is given of the key rate-controlling processes, which differ for different properties and shelf types, as do the likely responses; that is, the distributions of nutrients, organic carbon, freshwater, sediments, and trace minerals will all respond differently to climate forcing. A fundamental conclusion is that the changes associated with light, nutrients, productivity and ice cover likely will be greatest at the shelf-break and margins, and that this forms a natural focus for a coordinated international effort. Recognizing that the real value of climate research is to prepare society for possible futures, and that such research must be based both on an understanding of the past (e.g. the palaeo-record) as well as an ability to reliably predict future scenarios (e.g. validated models), two recommendations emerge: firstly, a comprehensive survey of circumpolar shelf-break and slope sediments would provide long-term synchronous records of shelf-interior ocean exchange and primary production at the shelf edge; secondly, a synoptic panarctic ice and ocean survey using heavy icebreakers, aircraft, moorings and satellites would provide the validation data and knowledge required to properly model key forcing processes at the margins.

AB - Brief overviews of the Arctic's atmosphere, ice cover, circulation, primary production and sediment regime are given to provide a conceptual framework for considering panarctic shelves under scenarios of climate variability. We draw on past 'regional' studies to scale-up to the panarctic perspective. Within each discipline a synthesis of salient distributions and processes is given, and then functions are noted that are critically poised and/or near transition and thereby sensitive to climate variability and change. The various shelf regions are described and distinguished among three types: inflow shelves, interior shelves and outflow shelves. Emphasis is on projected climate changes that will likely have the greatest impact on shelf-basin exchange, productivity and sediment processes including (a) changes in wind fields (e.g. currents, ice drift, upwelling and downwelling); (b) changes in sea ice distribution (e.g. radiation and wind regimes, enhanced upwelling and mixing, ice transport and scour resuspension, primary production); and (c) changes in hydrology (e.g. sediment and organic carbon delivery, nutrient supplies). A discussion is given of the key rate-controlling processes, which differ for different properties and shelf types, as do the likely responses; that is, the distributions of nutrients, organic carbon, freshwater, sediments, and trace minerals will all respond differently to climate forcing. A fundamental conclusion is that the changes associated with light, nutrients, productivity and ice cover likely will be greatest at the shelf-break and margins, and that this forms a natural focus for a coordinated international effort. Recognizing that the real value of climate research is to prepare society for possible futures, and that such research must be based both on an understanding of the past (e.g. the palaeo-record) as well as an ability to reliably predict future scenarios (e.g. validated models), two recommendations emerge: firstly, a comprehensive survey of circumpolar shelf-break and slope sediments would provide long-term synchronous records of shelf-interior ocean exchange and primary production at the shelf edge; secondly, a synoptic panarctic ice and ocean survey using heavy icebreakers, aircraft, moorings and satellites would provide the validation data and knowledge required to properly model key forcing processes at the margins.

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=33751172300&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1016/j.pocean.2006.10.005

DO - 10.1016/j.pocean.2006.10.005

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:33751172300

VL - 71

SP - 145

EP - 181

JO - Progress in Oceanography

JF - Progress in Oceanography

SN - 0079-6611

IS - 2-4

ER -

ID: 186942052