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Creators/Authors contains: "Strutton, Peter"

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  1. Abstract. Identifying the processes that drive the rapid climatological retreat phase of Antarctica’s annual sea-ice cycle is crucial to understanding, modelling and attributing observed trends and recent high variability in sea-ice extent, and to projecting future sea-ice conditions and impacts accurately. To date, the rapid annual retreat of Antarctic sea ice each spring–summer has been largely attributed to lateral and basal melting of ice floes, enhanced by wave-induced breakup of large floes. Here, based on observations and modelling, we propose that waves play important additional roles in generating previously-neglected surface and interior melting, by removing snow from small floes, flooding them, and pulverising them into slush. Results here show a resultant estimated reduction in albedo by 0.38–0.54, that increases melting by 0.9–5.2 cm day-1 at 60–70o S compared to a snow-covered floe of first-year ice, and depending on surface type, wave-flooding coverage, latitude and ice density. Rapid proliferation of algae within and on the high-light and high-nutrient environment of the wave-modified ice reduces the albedo by a further 0.1 to increase the melt-rate enhancement to 1.1–6.1 cm day-1. Melting is further accelerated by a wave-induced ice–albedo feedback mechanism, similar to that associated with Arctic melt ponds but involving seawater rather than freshwater. This positive feedback is strengthened by ice-algal greening. Floe thinning and weakening by wave-melting initiate additional dynamic–thermodynamic feedbacks by increasing the likelihood of both wave-flooding and flexural breakup, leading to further floe melting. Wave melting and the associated physical–biological feedbacks will likely increase in importance in a predicted stormier and warmer Southern Ocean, and will also become more prevalent in a changing Arctic. There are implications for global weather and climate, the health of the ocean and its ecosystems, fisheries, ice-shelf stability and sea-level rise, atmospheric and oceanic biogeochemistry, and human activities. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available July 22, 2026