.Asia’s
disappearing lakes
2
December 2013
One
of the worst environmental disasters in living memory is the near
vanishing of the Aral Sea in Central Asia. What was once one of the
world’s four largest lakes, containing some 1.5 thousand islands
and covering 68,000 square kilometres (26,000 miles), by 2007 the
Aral Sea was only 10% of its previous size and divided into four
lakes.
What
happened to Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan’s inland sea was not the
result of normal changing weather patterns. The fate of the Aral Sea
is a story of human intervention, contamination and local climate
change.
From
a 2010 ABC/AP
report:
The
shrunken sea has ruined the once-robust fishing economy and left
fishing trawlers stranded in sandy wastelands, leaning over as if
they dropped from the air. The sea’s evaporation has left layers of
highly salted sand, which winds can carry as far away as Scandinavia
and Japan, and which plague local people with health troubles.
The
regional competition for water from the lake began in the 1940s with
leaky irrigation canals and took a great leap forward in the early
1960s with the Soviet diversion of two major tributary rivers in
order in order to promote desert agriculture. Most of the water went
to waste. Salinity went up to around three times that of normal
seawater, which – together with agricultural runoff, pesticides,
industry and weapons testing waste – has resulted in the death of
the local fishing industry, water shortages and health problems.
Over
in China, the largest desert fresh water lake has also been steadily
declining since the 1970s and rapidly disappearing (nearly by a
third) in only the past four years.
From
the Guardian:
Hongjiannao
Lake, several hundred kilometres to the west of Beijing, has been
disappearing since the 1970s, due to a combination of coal mining and
climate
change. But the speed at which it is losing area has increased
rapidly since 2009, when it measured 46 square kilometres (sq km),
down from 67 sq km in 1969.
The
multi-pronged threat of decreasing rainfall, rising temperatures and
a water-greedy large scale coal mine are reminders of how industrial
development can exploit an extremely valuable natural area and ruin
it in the process.
Another
example is the picturesque Black Dragon Lake in the city of Lijiang,
northwest Yunnan province. In this case hot weather and drought have
caused the lake to disappear altogether. Furthermore, Yunnan’s
hydroelectric projects are putting stresses on water resources across
the region.
Dried
up reservoir in China's Yunnan province, Pic: Remko Tanis
Lijiang
is hardly alone. Similar situations are happening across other parts
of Yunnan province, which usually has more rain than half of China’s
regions. But it has experienced extremely low rainfall for the past
three years.
In
the first quarter of this year, Yunnan’s average rainfall dropped
by 70 percent, indicating the start of the drought’s fourth
consecutive year, according to the water resources department in the
region.
–EE
News
Future
weather forecasts are grim and the replacement of natural forests
with commercial timber is not helping. Many of Yunnan’s farmers are
struggling to survive
Study
warns of catastrophic wildlife population collapse in Sahara
U.S.
and British wildlife experts say the world's largest tropical desert,
the African Sahara, has suffered a catastrophic collapse of its
wildlife populations.
UPI,
3
December 2013
A
study led by the Wildlife Conservation Society and Zoological Society
or London assessed 14 desert species and found half of them are
regionally extinct or confined to 1 percent or less of their
historical range, a WCS release said Tuesday.
The
causes of the declines are difficult to determine because of a
chronic lack of studies across the region, due to past and ongoing
insecurity, the study author said, although overhunting is likely to
have played a role.
"The
Sahara serves as an example of a wider historical neglect of deserts
and the human communities who depend on them," study lead author
Sarah Durant said. "The scientific community can make an
important contribution to conservation in deserts by establishing
baseline information on biodiversity and developing new approaches to
sustainable management of desert species and ecosystems."
Some
governments have begun to make commitments to protect the Sahara, the
researchers noted.
Niger
just established the 37,451-square-mile Termit and Tin Toumma
National Nature Reserve, home to most of the world's 200 or so
remaining wild addax, a type of antelope, and one of a handful of
surviving populations of dama gazelle and Saharan cheetah.
Dust,
global warming portend dry future for the Colorado River
Rocky
Mountain snowpack melts six weeks earlier than in the 1800s
2
December 2013
14
November 2013 (CIRES) – Reducing the amount of desert dust swept
onto snowy Rocky Mountain peaks could help Western water managers
deal with the challenges of a warmer future, according to a new study
led by researchers at NOAA’s Cooperative Institute for Research in
Environmental Sciences (CIRES) at the University of Colorado Boulder.
With
support from the CIRES Western Water Assessment (WWA) and NASA’s
Interdisciplinary Science program, CIRES’ Jeffrey Deems and his
colleagues examined the combined effects of regional warming and dust
on the Colorado River, which is fed primarily by snowmelt.
During
recent years, desert dust has been settling thick and dark on the
snowpack in the northern Rocky Mountain headwaters of the Colorado
River, and snowpack is melting out as many as six weeks earlier than
it did in the 1800s, according to the new assessment, published last
week in Hydrology and Earth System Sciences. Snow dusted with dark
particles absorbs more of the Sun’s rays and melts faster than
clean snow.
Add
the regional warming expected in the future, and the situation seems
likely to grow more dire for the 40 million people who depend on the
Colorado River for water. The river’s flow falls by more than 20
percent by 2100 in some of the future climate scenarios Deems and his
colleagues investigated. Moreover, warming could make dust problems
worse, by increasing the risk of drought.
“But
we may be able to do something about dust,” said Deems, who works
with WWA and CIRES’ National Snow and Ice Data Center. “If the
future normal is this extreme dust scenario and we can push that
scenario back to lower dust levels with land restoration or
management, we could keep the snow in the mountains longer, and maybe
even get some of that water back.”
Since
the mid-1800s, human land use activities have disturbed Southwestern
desert soils and broken up the soil crust that curbs wind erosion,
leading to increased dust. In previous research, Deems and his
colleagues showed that increasing dustiness leads to accelerated
snowpack melt.
That
earlier work was based on the moderately dusty years of 2005–2008,
with about five times as much dust than in the 1800s. But during
2009, 2010 and 2013, unprecedented amounts of desert dust fell on
Colorado snowpacks, about five times more than observed from
2005–2008. Moreover, other researchers have reported that climate
change is likely to increase the frequency and intensity of drought
in the Southwest, which could increase dust problems further by
harming the grasses and shrubs that reduce surface wind speeds.
For
the new work, the researchers used climate and hydrology models to
investigate the effect of that “extreme dust” on the Colorado
River’s flow now and in the future, as the Southwest continues to
warm. Snowmelt in the extreme dust scenario shifted even earlier in
the season, by another three weeks, pulling peak water levels in the
Colorado River to earlier in the spring and leaving less water for
later in the year.
“In
the Upper Colorado River Basin, the snowpack is our most important
reservoir,” said co-author Thomas Painter of NASA’s Jet
Propulsion Laboratory. “With continued dusty years and greater
warming, water managers will have to make their decisions very early
in the season. No longer will they have the nice long snowmelt
season, shortened as it already has been, to see how snowmelt runoff
is going.”
The
research team also found a subtle shift on the total water loss in
the Colorado River, from a loss of 5 percent estimated during the
moderate dust years of 2005–2008, to a total loss of about 6
percent lost during extremely dusty years. This relatively small
change is due primarily to the fact that as snowmelt creeps earlier
and earlier in the year, the Sun’s angle in the sky is shallower
and provides less energy for evaporation than it does later in the
spring.
“Our
results suggest that if we can adopt dust-reducing land management
strategies and rehabilitate major dust sources, we can keep our snow
on the mountains longer, and perhaps offset some of the emerging
climate impacts,” said co-author Brad Udall, director of the
Getches-Wilkinson Center for Natural Resources, Energy and the
Environment at CU-Boulder. “Dust reduction could be a very powerful
strategy to help us adapt to the growing impacts of climate change on
our precious water supplies in the American Southwest.” [more]
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.