Global and regional ocean mass budget closure since 2003

In recent sea level studies, discrepancies have arisen in ocean mass observations obtained from the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment and its successor, GRACE Follow-On, with GRACE estimates consistently appearing lower than density-corrected ocean volume observations since 2015. These dispari...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2024-02, Vol.15 (1), p.1416-1416, Article 1416
Hauptverfasser: Ludwigsen, Carsten Bjerre, Andersen, Ole Baltazar, Marzeion, Ben, Malles, Jan-Hendrik, Müller Schmied, Hannes, Döll, Petra, Watson, Christopher, King, Matt A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In recent sea level studies, discrepancies have arisen in ocean mass observations obtained from the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment and its successor, GRACE Follow-On, with GRACE estimates consistently appearing lower than density-corrected ocean volume observations since 2015. These disparities have raised concerns about potential systematic biases in sea-level observations, with significant implications for our understanding of this essential climate variable. Here, we reconstruct the global and regional ocean mass change through models of ice and water mass changes on land and find that it closely aligns with both GRACE and density-corrected ocean volume observations after implementing recent adjustments to the wet troposphere correction and halosteric sea level. While natural variability in terrestrial water storage is important on interannual timescales, we find that the net increase in ocean mass over 20 years can be almost entirely attributed to ice wastage and human management of water resources. This study shows that ice loss and human water use models explain global and regional satellite-observed ocean mass changes since 2003 and thereby pinpoint the main cause of sea level rise, with a negligible role coming from natural variability.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-024-45726-w