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Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

Arctic warming interrupts the Transpolar Drift and affects long-range transport of sea ice and ice-rafted matter

Scientific Reports 2019 165 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Hans Jakob Belter, Hans Jakob Belter, Hans Jakob Belter, Ilka Peeken Ilka Peeken Thomas Krumpen, Ilka Peeken Thomas Krumpen, Thomas Krumpen, Thomas Krumpen, Ilka Peeken Thomas Krumpen, Hans Jakob Belter, Thomas Krumpen, Thomas Krumpen, Hans Jakob Belter, Ellen Damm, Hans Jakob Belter, Thomas Krumpen, Ilka Peeken Thomas Krumpen, Thomas Krumpen, Eva‐Maria Nöthig, Thomas Krumpen, Ilka Peeken Stefan Hendricks, Thomas Krumpen, Thomas Krumpen, Thomas Krumpen, Ilka Peeken Thomas Krumpen, Thomas Krumpen, Thomas Krumpen, Thomas Krumpen, Thomas Krumpen, Antje Boëtius, Eva‐Maria Nöthig, Ellen Damm, Thomas Krumpen, Thomas Krumpen, Thomas Krumpen, Thomas Krumpen, Thomas Krumpen, Thomas Krumpen, Eva‐Maria Nöthig, Ilka Peeken Ilka Peeken Ilka Peeken Thomas Krumpen, Thomas Krumpen, Thomas Krumpen, Ilka Peeken Christian Haas, Marcel Nicolaus, Marcel Nicolaus, Ilka Peeken Thomas Krumpen, Thomas Krumpen, Thomas Krumpen, Thomas Krumpen, Ilka Peeken Ilka Peeken Stefan Hendricks, Thomas Krumpen, Robert Ricker, Marcel Nicolaus, Antje Boëtius, Ilka Peeken Stefan Hendricks, Ilka Peeken Stefan Hendricks, Hans Jakob Belter, Hans Jakob Belter, Hans Jakob Belter, Hans Jakob Belter, Ilka Peeken Christian Haas, Eva‐Maria Nöthig, Ilka Peeken Stephan Paul, Ellen Damm, Ellen Damm, Antje Boëtius, Ilka Peeken Ilka Peeken Robert Ricker, Robert Ricker, Christian Haas, Ruediger Stein, Christian Haas, Stefan Hendricks, Stefan Hendricks, Christian Haas, Christian Haas, Ellen Damm, Ilka Peeken Marcel Nicolaus, Marcel Nicolaus, Robert Ricker, Ilka Peeken Robert Ricker, Ilka Peeken

Summary

This study found that accelerating Arctic warming is disrupting the Transpolar Drift, reducing long-range sea ice transport and altering how ice-associated matter -- including pollutants -- is redistributed across the Arctic Ocean.

Study Type Environmental

Sea ice is an important transport vehicle for gaseous, dissolved and particulate matter in the Arctic Ocean. Due to the recently observed acceleration in sea ice drift, it has been assumed that more matter is advected by the Transpolar Drift from shallow shelf waters to the central Arctic Ocean and beyond. However, this study provides first evidence that intensified melt in the marginal zones of the Arctic Ocean interrupts the transarctic conveyor belt and has led to a reduction of the survival rates of sea ice exported from the shallow Siberian shelves (-15% per decade). As a consequence, less and less ice formed in shallow water areas (<30 m) has reached Fram Strait (-17% per decade), and more ice and ice-rafted material is released in the northern Laptev Sea and central Arctic Ocean. Decreasing survival rates of first-year ice are visible all along the Russian shelves, but significant only in the Kara Sea, East Siberian Sea and western Laptev Sea. Identified changes affect biogeochemical fluxes and ecological processes in the central Arctic: A reduced long-range transport of sea ice alters transport and redistribution of climate relevant gases, and increases accumulation of sediments and contaminates in the central Arctic Ocean, with consequences for primary production, and the biodiversity of the Arctic Ocean.

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