Articles | Volume 1, issue 1
https://doi.org/10.5194/wcd-1-261-2020
https://doi.org/10.5194/wcd-1-261-2020
Research article
 | 
12 May 2020
Research article |  | 12 May 2020

Intermittency of Arctic–mid-latitude teleconnections: stratospheric pathway between autumn sea ice and the winter North Atlantic Oscillation

Peter Yu Feng Siew, Camille Li, Stefan Pieter Sobolowski, and Martin Peter King

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Status: closed
AC: Author comment | RC: Referee comment | SC: Short comment | EC: Editor comment
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Peer-review completion

AR: Author's response | RR: Referee report | ED: Editor decision
AR by Peter Yu Feng Siew on behalf of the Authors (06 Mar 2020)  Author's response   Manuscript 
ED: Referee Nomination & Report Request started (15 Mar 2020) by Yang Zhang
RR by Anonymous Referee #1 (18 Mar 2020)
RR by Anonymous Referee #2 (30 Mar 2020)
ED: Publish subject to minor revisions (review by editor) (31 Mar 2020) by Yang Zhang
AR by Peter Yu Feng Siew on behalf of the Authors (11 Apr 2020)  Author's response   Manuscript 
ED: Publish as is (22 Apr 2020) by Yang Zhang
AR by Peter Yu Feng Siew on behalf of the Authors (27 Apr 2020)
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Short summary
Arctic sea ice loss has been linked to changes in mid-latitude weather and climate. However, the literature offers differing views on the strength, robustness, and even existence of these linkages. We use a statistical tool (Causal Effect Networks) to show that one proposed pathway linking Barents–Kara ice and mid-latitude circulation is intermittent in observations and likely only active under certain conditions. This result may help explain apparent inconsistencies across previous studies.