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Antarctic coastal polynyas in the global climate system

journal contribution
posted on 2025-08-22, 03:47 authored by Nicholas GolledgeNicholas Golledge, Elizabeth KellerElizabeth Keller, Alexandra GossartAlexandra Gossart, A Malyarenko, A Bahamondes-Dominguez, M Krapp, Stefan Jendersie, DP Lowry, A Alevropoulos-Borrill, D Notz
Coastal polynyas describe regions of persistent open water within the sea-ice pack. In this Review, we outline the critical importance of Antarctic coastal polynyas in the Earth system (including for the atmosphere, sea-ice, ocean and biosphere) and outline their past, present and future changes. Strong offshore winds are the primary force opening coastal polynyas, varying on synoptic timescales to influence polynya existence and size. The exposed ocean surface ventilates heat to the atmosphere, allowing sea surface cooling and frazil ice formation. Frazil ice increases the salinity of surface waters, ultimately sinking as dense shelf water that drives the southern limb of the global ocean overturning circulation. Light and nutrient availability in coastal polynyas also encourages high primary productivity, making them critical aspects of the Antarctic marine food web. Coastal polynya strength and location varies through time, most notably at glacial–interglacial timescales owing to changes in continental shelf available for polynya formation. Predicting the future evolution of Antarctic coastal polynyas is challenged by inadequate model resolution and poorly constrained processes and behaviours, but there are indications that activity will decline with warming. A coordinated and expanded campaign of in situ measurements, as well as new satellite-based observations that use intelligent algorithms, would improve coupled atmosphere–sea-ice–ocean models and, thereby, enhance knowledge of Antarctic coastal polynyas.<p></p>

Funding

Funder: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft | Grant ID: ANTA1801

History

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Preferred citation

Golledge, N. R., Keller, E. D., Gossart, A., Malyarenko, A., Bahamondes-Dominguez, A., Krapp, M., Jendersie, S., Lowry, D. P., Alevropoulos-Borrill, A. & Notz, D. (2025). Antarctic coastal polynyas in the global climate system. Nature Reviews Earth and Environment, 6(2), 126-139. https://doi.org/10.1038/s43017-024-00634-x

Journal title

Nature Reviews Earth and Environment

Volume

6

Issue

2

Publication date

2025-02-01

Pagination

126-139

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Publication status

Published

Online publication date

2025-01-30

ISSN

2662-138X

eISSN

2662-138X

Language

en

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