Antarctic Overturning Circulation
Quote:Antarctic Overturning CirculationThe global ocean meridional overturning circulation is a large-scale system of ocean currents that have a crucial role in regulating Earth’s climate by transporting heat, carbon, nutrients and oxygen. Changes in meridional overturning circulation strength have driven past abrupt climate changes, and a strong overturning circulation has been key to Earth’s climate stability over the past 11,000 years49. The global over-turning circulation is often described as having two ‘cells’; an upper cell sourced in the Atlantic, overlying a lower cell originating from the Southern Ocean. The Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) cell forms cold and salty dense waters in the North Atlantic
The Antarctic Overturning Circulation cell involves the production of dense shelf waters around the Antarctic continental margin (Fig.3a), which then overflow down the continental slope into the abyssal ocean as Antarctic Bottom Water5
So that is what has been happening and keeping climate stable. What is happening now?
The authors reason that the decline in total sea ice is not the reason for the decrease in Antarctic Bottom Waters but that:
Quote:Melting of ice shelves and calving of icebergs in West Antarctica has resulted in sustained ocean freshening in the Ross Sea since the 1950s. This is thought to have caused the 30% decline in Antarctic Bottom Water transport in the Australian Antarctic Basin (downstream of the Ross Sea production region) observed since 1994.
Accelerating ice loss from West Antarctica could cause cessation of Ross Sea dense shelf water production by mid-century. This vulnerability is supported by interannual-forced simulations of a high-resolution model that accurately simulates dense shelf water production around coastal Antarctica, which suggest production can cease altogether during mild winters.
In this same model, the addition of meltwater to the surface ocean drives a projected 42% decline in Antarctic Bottom Water formation by 2050 in a high-warming scenario
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Similarly, high meltwater forcing in a coarser resolution ocean model generates a near complete shutdown of Antarctic Bottom Water production this century.
This evidence suggests that a rapid and substantial slowdown in Antarctic Overturning Circulation is already underway, with observations suggesting that modelled rates of future decline may be underestimated. . . .
Advances in observations, process-based understanding, modelling and palaeoclimate evidence, suggest the Antarctic Overturning Circulation is already undergoing rapid change at current warming levels and will continue to decline in the 21st century.
This decline may be even more abrupt than the equivalent Northern Hemisphere processes, with one study indicating the decline in Antarctic Bottom Water transport by 2050 could be more than double the decline in AMOC strength