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Antarctica InSync Scientific Theme 1: Southern Ocean physical and biogeochemical cycles in a changing climate [white paper]

Sallée, J.B.; Swart, S.; Carli, E.; Droste, Elise; Olivier, L.; Amblas, D.; Castagno, P.; Cusick, A.; Delille, B.; Deregibus, D.; du Plessis, M.D.; Ferola, A.; Hassler, C.; Hattermann, T.; Haumann, F.A.; Herraiz-Borreguero, L.; Hirano, D.; Höfer, J.; Krzemińska, M.; León, R.; Llanillo, P.J.; Maistriau, C.; Martin, T.; Mayot, N.; Meijers, A. ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3876-7736; Mestre, M.; Metzl, N.; Meyer, A.; Middag, R.; Mizobata, K.; Nissen, C.; Olmedo, E.; Panda, P.P.; Park, K.; Patara, L.; Pezzi, L.; Prend, C.J.; Sabu, P.; Sanders, R.; Siems, S.; Silvano, A.; Smith, I.; Stevens, C.; Sutton, A.; Talley, L.; Thompson, A.; Tripathy, S.C.; Uitz, J.; Urgeles, R.; Wuttig, K.. 2026 Antarctica InSync Scientific Theme 1: Southern Ocean physical and biogeochemical cycles in a changing climate [white paper]. The Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research, 16pp.

Abstract

Theme 1 addresses the Southern Ocean's (south of 30°S) critical role in regulating Earth's climate through circulation patterns that mediate global exchanges of heat, carbon, freshwater, and
nutrients. The region has absorbed over 70% of anthropogenic heat and has contributed to about 40% of the global ocean uptake of human-emitted carbon dioxide (CO₂) while also controlling ice shelf stability and sea level rise. However, fundamental gaps in year-round observations, particularly during austral autumn, winter, and spring, severely limit our understanding of these processes and their responses to rapid climate change. This white paper establishes key knowledge
gaps and high-priority recommendations that are tractable within the InSync timeframe through coordinated program execution with strong engagement from national operators and funding agencies. Critical needs include seasonal observations of the marginal ice zone where carbon, heat and nutrient-rich waters upwell, year-round continental shelf measurements where dense water formation and ice-ocean interactions occur, standardized air-sea flux measurements, and strategic monitoring of regional choke points. Success requires international resource sharing, coordinated deployments, and sustained commitment to both process studies and long-term monitoring

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Programmes:
BAS Programmes 2015 > Polar Oceans
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