“…A conveyor belt mechanism with a northern source, a southern sink, and an intermediate zone where ice is transported southward by northerly winds, has been proposed to explain the basic north-south SIA structure using observations alone (Pease, 1980;Niebauer et al, 1999;Li et al, 2014). In the northern Bering Sea, northerly or northeasterly wintertime winds promote ice growth and favor the southward transport of sea ice, while northward oceanic heat transport from the southern Bering Sea shelf can accelerate sea ice melting and inhibit southward sea ice expansion (Stabeno et al, 2007;Brown and Arrigo, 2012;Li et al, 2014). Simulation results have shown that from January to May, northeasterly winds transport 1.4×10 12 m 3 of sea ice to the south.…”