Arctic sea ice retreats to second lowest extent on record

(Graphic from the National Snow and Ice Data Center)
(Graphic from the National Snow and Ice Data Center)

Arctic Sea ice retreated to it’s second lowest level on record this summer. Scientists announced today the ice likely reached its lowest extent on Sept. 10. The Arctic Ocean ended the summer season with 1.6 million square miles of ice, tying 2007 for the second lowest amount.

Mark Serreze is director of the National Snow and Ice Data Center. He says sea ice extent has been on a downward trend since 1979.

“But it looks like over the past decade the loss rate is starting to accelerate,” he said.  “It probably has to do with the fact that the ice cover is thinner now, so it doesn’t take as much energy to melt out big portions of it. So we do seem to be in the fast lane, so to speak.”

Serreze says at this rate, the Arctic Ocean is headed for ice free summers sometime in the next few decades.

There was so little Arctic sea ice at the end of the winter, scientists thought 2016 may beat the previous record low, set in 2012. But conditions over the Arctic Ocean this summer were generally cool and cloudy, limiting the rate of sea ice loss.

The ice near Alaska in the Chukchi Sea is still holding up over an important walrus feeding area called Hanna Shoal. Anthony Fischbach is a walrus biologist with the United States Geological Survey.

“The regional presence of sea ice here makes a big difference for Alaskans and the wildlife that we have that depends on it,” he said.

Fischbach doesn’t expect walrus to haul out this year on shore in Northern Alaska in huge numbers like they have most years since 2007. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service says there haven’t been any reports of a large haul out near Point Lay.

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