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An assessment of the Arctic Ocean in a suite of interannual CORE-II simulations. Part II: Liquid freshwater

Authors :
Sergey Danilov
Christophe Cassou
Rüdiger Gerdes
Claus W. Böning
Mats Bentsen
Yosuke Fujii
Eric P. Chassignet
Hiroyuki Tsujino
Jianhua Lu
Christina Roth
Gokhan Danabasoglu
David A. Bailey
Doroteaciro Iovino
Steve G. Yeager
Yevgeny Aksenov
Helge Drange
A. J. George Nurser
Craig M. Lee
Thomas Jung
Elodie Fernandez
Bonita L. Samuels
Andrew C. Coward
Stephen M. Griffies
William G. Large
Qiang Wang
Benjamin Rabe
Arne Biastoch
Alexandra Bozec
Beth Curry
Xuezhu Wang
Mehmet Ilicak
Simona Masina
David Salas y Mélia
Aurore Voldoire
Pier Giuseppe Fogli
Sophie Valcke
Camille Lique
Paul Spence
Alexandra Jahn
Source :
Ocean Modelling (1463-5003) (Elsevier Sci Ltd), 2016-03, Vol. 99, P. 86-109, EPIC3Ocean Modelling, 99, pp. 86-109
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2016.

Abstract

The Arctic Ocean simulated in 14 global ocean-sea ice models in the framework of the Coordinated Ocean-ice Reference Experiments, phase II (CORE-II) is analyzed in this study. The focus is on the Arctic liquid freshwater (FW) sources and freshwater content (FWC). The models agree on the interannual variability of liquid FW transport at the gateways where the ocean volume transport determines the FW transport variability. The variation of liquid FWC is induced by both the surface FW flux (associated with sea ice production) and lateral liquid FW transport, which are in phase when averaged on decadal time scales. The liquid FWC shows an increase starting from the mid-1990s, caused by the reduction of both sea ice formation and liquid FW export, with the former being more significant in most of the models. The mean state of the FW budget is less consistently simulated than the temporal variability. The model ensemble means of liquid FW transport through the Arctic gateways compare well with observations. On average, the models have too high mean FWC, weaker upward trends of FWC in the recent decade than the observation, and low consistency in the temporal variation of FWC spatial distribution, which needs to be further explored for the purpose of model development.

Details

ISSN :
14635003
Volume :
99
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Ocean Modelling
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....735caaf1eeab96e528bfe1d2f2ddb8bd
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ocemod.2015.12.009