WASHINGTON -- Steve Kramer spent an hour and a half swimming in the ocean this week -- in Maine.
The
water temperature was 72 degrees -- more like Ocean City, Md., this
time of year. And Ocean City's water temp hit 88 degrees, toasty even
by Miami Beach standards.
Kramer,
26, who lives in the seaside town of Scarborough, said it was the first
time he's ever swam so long in Maine's coastal waters.
It's
not just the ocean off the Northeast coast that is super-warm this
summer. July was the hottest the world's oceans have been in almost 130
years of record-keeping.
The
average water temperature worldwide was 62.6 degrees, according to the
National Climatic Data Center, the branch of the U.S. government that
keeps world weather records. June was only slightly cooler, while
August could set another record, scientists say. The previous record
was set in July 1998 during a powerful El Nino.
Meteorologists
said there's a combination of forces at work: A natural El Nino weather
pattern just getting started on top of worsening man-made global
warming, and a dash of random weather variations. The resulting ocean
heat is already harming threatened coral reefs. It could also hasten
the melting of Arctic sea ice and help hurricanes strengthen.
The
Gulf of Mexico, where warm water fuels hurricanes, has temperatures
dancing around 90. Most of the water in the Northern Hemisphere has
been considerably warmer than normal. The Mediterranean is about three
degrees warmer than normal. Higher temperatures rule in the Pacific and
Indian Oceans.
The
phenomena is most noticeable near the Arctic, where water temperatures
are as much as 10 degrees above average. The tongues of warm water
could help melt sea ice from below and even cause thawing of ice sheets
on Greenland, said Waleed Abdalati, director of the Earth Science and
Observation Center at the University of Colorado.
Breaking
heat records in water is more ominous as a sign of global warming than
breaking temperature marks on land, because water takes longer to heat
up and does not cool off as easily as land.
"This
warm water we're seeing doesn't just disappear next year; it'll be
around for a long time," said climate scientist Andrew Weaver of the
University of Victoria in British Columbia. It takes five times more
energy to warm water than land.
The
warmer water "affects weather on the land," Weaver said. "This is
another yet really important indicator of the change that's occurring."
Georgia
Institute of Technology atmospheric science professor Judith Curry said
water is warming in more places than usual, something that has not been
seen in more than 50 years.
Add
to that an unusual weather pattern this summer where the warmest
temperatures seem to be just over oceans, while slightly cooler air is
concentrated over land, said Deke Arndt, head of climate monitoring at
the climate data center.
The pattern is so unusual that he suggested meteorologists may want to study that pattern to see what's behind it.
The
effects of that warm water are already being seen in coral reefs, said
C. Mark Eakin, coordinator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration's coral reef watch. Long-term excessive heat bleaches
colorful coral reefs white and sometimes kills them.
Bleaching
has started to crop up in the Florida Keys, Puerto Rico and the Virgin
Islands. Typically, bleaching occurs after weeks or months of prolonged
high water temperatures. That usually means September or even October
in the Caribbean, said Eakin. He found bleaching in Guam Wednesday.
It's too early to know if the coral will recover or die. Experts are
"bracing for another bad year," he said.
The problems caused by the El Nino pattern are likely to get worse, the scientists say.
An
El Nino occurs when part of the central Pacific warms up, which in turn
changes weather patterns worldwide for many months. El Nino and its
cooling flip side, La Nina, happen every few years.
During
an El Nino, temperatures on water and land tend to rise in many places,
leading to an increase in the overall global average temperature. An El
Nino has other effects, too, including dampening Atlantic hurricane
formation and increasing rainfall and mudslides in Southern California.
Warm
water is a required fuel for hurricanes. What's happening in the oceans
"will add extra juice to the hurricanes," Curry said.
Hurricane
activity has been quiet for much of the summer, but that may change
soon, she said. Hurricane Bill quickly became a major storm and the
National Hurricane Center warned that warm waters are along the path of
the hurricane for the next few days.
Hurricanes
need specific air conditions, so warmer water alone does not
necessarily mean more or bigger storms, said James Franklin, chief
hurricane specialist at the National Hurricane Center in Miami.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
Copyright © 2009 ABC News Internet Ventures