Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Julienne Stroeve is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Julienne Stroeve.


Science | 2007

Perspectives on the Arctic's Shrinking Sea-Ice Cover

Mark C. Serreze; Marika M. Holland; Julienne Stroeve

Linear trends in arctic sea-ice extent over the period 1979 to 2006 are negative in every month. This ice loss is best viewed as a combination of strong natural variability in the coupled ice-ocean-atmosphere system and a growing radiative forcing associated with rising concentrations of atmospheric greenhouse gases, the latter supported by evidence of qualitative consistency between observed trends and those simulated by climate models over the same period. Although the large scatter between individual model simulations leads to much uncertainty as to when a seasonally ice-free Arctic Ocean might be realized, this transition to a new arctic state may be rapid once the ice thins to a more vulnerable state. Loss of the ice cover is expected to affect the Arctics freshwater system and surface energy budget and could be manifested in middle latitudes as altered patterns of atmospheric circulation and precipitation.


Climatic Change | 2012

The Arctic's rapidly shrinking sea ice cover: A research synthesis

Julienne Stroeve; Mark C. Serreze; Marika M. Holland; Jennifer E. Kay; James Malanik; Andrew P. Barrett

The sequence of extreme September sea ice extent minima over the past decade suggests acceleration in the response of the Arctic sea ice cover to external forcing, hastening the ongoing transition towards a seasonally open Arctic Ocean. This reflects several mutually supporting processes. Because of the extensive open water in recent Septembers, ice cover in the following spring is increasingly dominated by thin, first-year ice (ice formed during the previous autumn and winter) that is vulnerable to melting out in summer. Thinner ice in spring in turn fosters a stronger summer ice-albedo feedback through earlier formation of open water areas. A thin ice cover is also more vulnerable to strong summer retreat under anomalous atmospheric forcing. Finally, general warming of the Arctic has reduced the likelihood of cold years that could bring about temporary recovery of the ice cover. Events leading to the September ice extent minima of recent years exemplify these processes.


Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union | 2008

Arctic Sea Ice Extent Plummets in 2007

Julienne Stroeve; Mark C. Serreze; Sheldon D. Drobot; Shari Gearheard; Marika M. Holland; James A. Maslanik; Walter N. Meier; Theodore A. Scambos

Arctic sea ice declined rapidly to unprecedented low extents in the summer of 2007, raising concern that the Arctic may be on the verge of a fundamental transition toward a seasonal ice cover. Arctic sea ice extent typically attains a seasonal maximum in March and minimum in September. Over the course of the modern satellite record (1979 to present), sea ice extent has declined significantly in all months, with the decline being most pronounced in September. By mid-July 2007, it was clear that a new record low would be set during the summer of 2007.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2014

Changes in Arctic melt season and implications for sea ice loss

Julienne Stroeve; Thorsten Markus; Linette N. Boisvert; Jeffrey Miller; Andrew P. Barrett

The Arctic-wide melt season has lengthened at a rate of 5 days decade−1 from 1979 to 2013, dominated by later autumn freezeup within the Kara, Laptev, East Siberian, Chukchi, and Beaufort seas between 6 and 11 days decade−1. While melt onset trends are generally smaller, the timing of melt onset has a large influence on the total amount of solar energy absorbed during summer. The additional heat stored in the upper ocean of approximately 752 MJ m−2 during the last decade increases sea surface temperatures by 0.5 to 1.5 °C and largely explains the observed delays in autumn freezeup within the Arctic Oceans adjacent seas. Cumulative anomalies in total absorbed solar radiation from May through September for the most recent pentad locally exceed 300–400 MJ m−2 in the Beaufort, Chukchi, and East Siberian seas. This extra solar energy is equivalent to melting 0.97 to 1.3 m of ice during the summer.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2003

A record minimum arctic sea ice extent and area in 2002

Mark C. Serreze; James A. Maslanik; Theodore A. Scambos; Florence Fetterer; Julienne Stroeve; Kenneth W. Knowles; C. M. Fowler; Sheldon D. Drobot; Roger G. Barry; Terry M. Haran

[1] Arctic sea ice extent and area in September 2002 reached their lowest levels recorded since 1978. These conditions likely resulted from (1) anomalous warm southerly winds in spring, advecting ice poleward from the Siberian coast (2) persistent low pressure and high temperatures over the Arctic Ocean in summer, promoting ice divergence and rapid melt.


Nature Climate Change | 2013

Temperature and vegetation seasonality diminishment over northern lands

Liang Xu; Ranga B. Myneni; F. S. Chapin; Terry V. Callaghan; Jorge E. Pinzon; Compton J. Tucker; Zaichun Zhu; Jian Bi; Philippe Ciais; Hans Tømmervik; Eugénie S. Euskirchen; Bruce C. Forbes; Shilong Piao; Bruce T. Anderson; Sangram Ganguly; Ramakrishna R. Nemani; Scott J. Goetz; P.S.A. Beck; Andrew G. Bunn; Chunxiang Cao; Julienne Stroeve

Pronounced increases in winter temperature result in lower seasonal temperature differences, with implications for vegetation seasonality and productivity. Research now indicates that temperature and vegetation seasonality in northern ecosystems have diminished to an extent equivalent to a southerly shift of 4°– 7° in latitude, and may reach the equivalent of up to 20° over the twenty-first century.


Journal of Climate | 2006

Greenland Ice Sheet Surface Mass Balance Variability (1988–2004) from Calibrated Polar MM5 Output*

Jason E. Box; David H. Bromwich; Bruce A. Veenhuis; Le-Sheng Bai; Julienne Stroeve; Jeffrey C. Rogers; Konrad Steffen; Terry M. Haran; Sheng-Hung Wang

Regional climate model runs using the fifth-generation Pennsylvania State University–National Center for Atmospheric Research Mesocale Model modified for use in polar regions (Polar MM5), calibrated by independent in situ observations, demonstrate coherent regional patterns of Greenland ice sheet surface mass balance (SMB) change over a 17-yr period characterized by warming (1988–2004). Both accumulation and melt rates increased, partly counteracting each other for an overall negligible SMB trend. However, a 30% increase in meltwater runoff over this period suggests that the overall ice sheet mass balance has been increasingly negative, given observed meltwater-induced flow acceleration. SMB temporal variability of the whole ice sheet is best represented by ablation zone variability, suggesting that increased melting dominates over increased accumulation in a warming scenario. The melt season grew in duration over nearly the entire ablation zone by up to 40 days, 10 days on average. Accumulation area ratio decreased by 3%. Albedo reductions are apparent in five years of the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) derived data (2000–04). The Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR)-derived albedo changes (1988–99) were less consistent spatially. A conservative assumption as to glacier discharge and basal melting suggests an ice sheet mass loss over this period greater than 100 km 3 yr 1 , framing the Greenland ice sheet as the largest single glacial contributor to recent global sea level rise. Surface mass balance uncertainty, quantified from residual random error between model and independent observations, suggests two things: 1) changes smaller than approximately 200 km 3 yr 1 would not satisfy conservative statistical significance thresholds (i.e., two standard deviations) and 2) although natural variability and model uncertainty were separated in this analysis, the magnitude of each were roughly equivalent. Therefore, improvements in model accuracy and analysis of longer periods (assuming larger changes) are both needed for definitive mass balance change assessments.


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 1999

New Directions in Earth Observing: Scientific Applications of Multiangle Remote Sensing

David J. Diner; Gregory P. Asner; Roger Davies; Yuri Knyazikhin; Jan-Peter Muller; Anne W. Nolin; Bernard Pinty; Crystal B. Schaaf; Julienne Stroeve

The physical interpretation of simultaneous multiangle observations represents a relatively new approach to remote sensing of terrestrial geophysical and biophysical parameters. Multiangle measurements enable retrieval of physical scene characteristics, such as aerosol type, cloud morphology and height, and land cover (e.g., vegetation canopy type), providing improved albedo accuracies as well as compositional, morphological, and structural information that facilitates addressing many key climate, environmental, and ecological issues. While multiangle data from wide field-of-view scanners have traditionally been used to build up directional “signatures” of terrestrial scenes through multitemporal compositing, these approaches either treat the multiangle variation as a problem requiring correction or normalization or invoke statistical assumptions that may not apply to specific scenes. With the advent of a new generation of global imaging spectroradiometers capable of acquiring simultaneous visible/near-IR...


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Demographic models and IPCC climate projections predict the decline of an emperor penguin population

Stephanie Jenouvrier; Hal Caswell; Christophe Barbraud; Marika M. Holland; Julienne Stroeve; Henri Weimerskirch

Studies have reported important effects of recent climate change on Antarctic species, but there has been to our knowledge no attempt to explicitly link those results to forecasted population responses to climate change. Antarctic sea ice extent (SIE) is projected to shrink as concentrations of atmospheric greenhouse gases (GHGs) increase, and emperor penguins (Aptenodytes forsteri) are extremely sensitive to these changes because they use sea ice as a breeding, foraging and molting habitat. We project emperor penguin population responses to future sea ice changes, using a stochastic population model that combines a unique long-term demographic dataset (1962–2005) from a colony in Terre Adélie, Antarctica and projections of SIE from General Circulation Models (GCM) of Earths climate included in the most recent Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) assessment report. We show that the increased frequency of warm events associated with projected decreases in SIE will reduce the population viability. The probability of quasi-extinction (a decline of 95% or more) is at least 36% by 2100. The median population size is projected to decline from ≈6,000 to ≈400 breeding pairs over this period. To avoid extinction, emperor penguins will have to adapt, migrate or change the timing of their growth stages. However, given the future projected increases in GHGs and its effect on Antarctic climate, evolution or migration seem unlikely for such long lived species at the remote southern end of the Earth.


Annals of Glaciology | 2007

Whither Arctic sea ice? A clear signal of decline regionally, seasonally and extending beyond the satellite record

Walter N. Meier; Julienne Stroeve; Florence Fetterer

Abstract The Arctic sea ice has been pointed to as one of the first and clearest indicators of climate change. Satellite passive microwave observations from 1979 through 2005 now indicate a significant –8.4±1.5% decade–1 trend (99% confidence level) in September sea-ice extent, a larger trend than earlier estimates due to acceleration of the decline over the past 41 years. There are differences in regional trends, with some regions more stable than others; not all regional trends are significant. The largest trends tend to occur in months where melt is at or near its peak for a given region. A longer time series of September extents since 1953 was adjusted to correct biases and extended through 2005. The trend from the longer time series is –7.7±0.6% decade–1 (99%), slightly less than from the satellite-derived data that begin in 1979, which is expected given the recent acceleration in the decline.

Collaboration


Dive into the Julienne Stroeve's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mark C. Serreze

Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

James A. Maslanik

Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Walter N. Meier

Goddard Space Flight Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Andrew P. Barrett

Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Marika M. Holland

National Center for Atmospheric Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Thorsten Markus

Goddard Space Flight Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Florence Fetterer

University of Colorado Boulder

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Theodore A. Scambos

University of Colorado Boulder

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alex D. Crawford

Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge