The Spatiotemporal Variability, Trends, and Drivers of Winter Arctic Polynyas
Journal article, 2026

Polynyas, thin-ice or open water regions within the sea ice, have regularly been observed in the Arctic satellite observations began in the 1970s. Their opening, in response to complex interactions between several drivers, significantly influences the regional weather and climate, ecosystem, and ocean circulation. Yet their monitoring at the Arctic scale is rare since their detection is not trivial. Here, we use three sea ice satellite data products to detect and investigate major Arctic polynya events since 1978, focusing on their winter locations and total area. We compute the polynyas' recurrence percentage, total number, and area, varying the sea ice concentration (30%-60%) and thickness (10-30 thresholds to enhance our analysis robustness. We find that the most active polynya regions are along the coasts of the tev Sea, Kara Sea, Franz Josef Land, northwestern Greenland, and Chukchi Sea. Both total and cumulative polynya have significant increasing trends in these regions and at the pan-Arctic scale between 1978 and 2024. In these regions, find that wind speed and direction have a prominent 1-day lag effect on polynya openings, suggesting that they are heat polynyas. The air temperature plays a preconditioning role in many regions but seems to impact most the daily area tent, after the polynyas formed. Under rising temperatures and stronger extreme winds, our results suggest an increase Arctic polynya activity, although polynyas might then extend into the open ocean, where different processes would their opening.

Satellite observations

Climate variability

Atmosphere-ocean interaction

Arctic

Climate change

Sea ice

Author

Carmen Hau Man Wong

University of Gothenburg

Celine Heuze

University of Gothenburg

Luisa Ickes

Chalmers, Space, Earth and Environment, Geoscience and Remote Sensing

Lu Zhou

Utrecht University

Journal of Climate

0894-8755 (ISSN) 1520-0442 (eISSN)

Vol. 39 6 1433-1455

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Oceanography, Hydrology and Water Resources

Climate Science

Meteorology and Atmospheric Sciences

DOI

10.1175/JCLI-D-25-0312.1

More information

Latest update

3/13/2026