Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme study tells of profound changes to sea ice and permafrost, among others.
Arctic Ice
Extensive climate change is now affecting every form of life in
the Arctic, according to a major new assessment by international polar
scientists.
In the past four years, air temperatures have increased, sea ice
has declined sharply, surface waters in the Arctic ocean have warmed
and permafrost is in some areas rapidly thawing.
In addition, says the report released today at a Norwegian
government seminar, plants and trees are growing more vigorously, snow
cover is decreasing 1-2% a year and glaciers are shrinking.
Scientists from Norway, Canada, Russia and the US contributed to
the Arctic monitoring and assessment programme (Amap) study, which says
new factors such as "black carbon" – soot – ozone and methane may
now be contributing to global and arctic warming as much as carbon
dioxide.
"Black carbon and ozone in particular have a strong seasonal
pattern that makes their impacts particularly important in the Arctic,"
it says.