The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Alaska records its warmest month in July

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ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Alaska has been America’s canary in the coal mine for climate warming, and the yellow bird is swooning.

July was Alaska’s warmest month ever, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion.

Sea ice melted. Bering Sea fish swam in abovenorma­l temperatur­es. So did children in the coastal town of Nome. Wildfire season started early and stayed late. Thousands of walruses thronged to shore.

Unusual weather events like this could become more common with climate warming, said Brian Brettschne­ider, an associate climate researcher at the University of Alaska Fairbanks’ Internatio­nal Arctic Research Center. Alaska has seen “multiple decadeslon­g increases” in temperatur­e, he said.

“It becomes easier to have these unusual sets of conditions that now lead to records,” Brettschne­ider said.

Alaska’s average temperatur­e in July was 58.1 degrees (14.5 Celsius). That’s 5.4 degrees (3 Celsius) above average and 0.8 degrees (0.4 Celsius) higher than the previous warmest month of July 2004, NOAA said.

The effects were felt from the Arctic Ocean to the world’s largest temperate rainforest on Alaska’s Panhandle.

Anchorage, the state’s largest city, on July 4 for the first time hit 90 degrees (32.22 Celsius) at Ted Stevens Anchorage Internatio­nal Airport, 5 degrees higher than the city’s previous recorded high of 85 degrees (29.44 Celsius).

Sea ice off Alaska’s north and northwest shore and other Arctic regions retreated to the lowest level ever recorded for July, according to the National Snow and Ice Data Center at the University of Colorado.

Arctic sea ice for July set a record low of 2.9 million square miles (7.6 million square kilometers). That was a South Carolinasi­ze loss of 30,900 square miles (80,000 square kilometers) below the previous record low July in 2012.

Sea ice is the main habitat for polar bears and a resting platform for female walruses and their young. Several thousand walruses came to shore July 30, the first time they’ve been spotted in such large numbers before August.

Effects were less obvious in the Bering Sea off Alaska’s west coast. Lyle Britt, a NOAA Fisheries biologist who oversees the agency’s annual Bering Sea groundfish survey, was on a trawler east of the island of Saint Matthew during the first week of July.

“The temperatur­e out there for us was in the high 70s,” Britt said. “On those boats, everything up there is designed to conserve heat, not vent heat. It was unbearably warm inside the boat.”

On the ocean bottom, Britt’s crew for the second consecutiv­e year found scant evidence of a “cold pool,” the eastwest barrier of extremely cold, salty water that traditiona­lly concentrat­es Pacific cod and walleye pollock, the species that make fastfood fish sandwiches, in the southeaste­rn Bering Sea.

 ?? Dan Joling / Associated Press ?? Central Florida resident Paul Leake photograph­s a dahlia garden in Town Square in Anchorage, Alaska last week. Alaska recorded its warmest month ever in July and hot, dry weather has continued in Anchorage and much of the region south of the Alaska Range.
Dan Joling / Associated Press Central Florida resident Paul Leake photograph­s a dahlia garden in Town Square in Anchorage, Alaska last week. Alaska recorded its warmest month ever in July and hot, dry weather has continued in Anchorage and much of the region south of the Alaska Range.

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