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Rising surface salinity and declining sea ice: A new Southern Ocean state revealed by satellites

Nature and the biosphere

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences published June 30, 2025

  • Date (DD-MM-YYYY)

    07-07-2025 to 07-07-2026

    Available on-demand until 7th July 2026

  • Cost

    Free

  • Education type

    Article

  • CPD subtype

    On-demand

Description

For decades, the surface of the polar Southern Ocean (south of 50°S) has been freshening—an expected response to a warming climate. This freshening enhanced upper-ocean stratification, reducing the upward transport of subsurface heat and possibly contributing to sea ice expansion. It also limited the formation of open-ocean polynyas. Using satellite observations, we reveal a marked increase in surface salinity across the circumpolar Southern Ocean since 2015. This shift has weakened upper-ocean stratification, coinciding with a dramatic decline in Antarctic sea ice coverage. Additionally, rising salinity facilitated the reemergence of the Maud Rise polynya in the Weddell Sea, a phenomenon last observed in the mid-1970s. Crucially, we demonstrate that satellites can now monitor these changes in real time, providing essential evidence of the Southern Ocean’s potential transition toward persistently reduced sea ice coverage.

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