Warming Temperatures Threaten Fragile Balance in Canadian Arctic
22
September, 2014
Ellesmere
Island, Nunavut — It’s August, and there’s snow on the ground.
The six-week summer has already passed; our 24-hour daylight will
drop to 16 in just a month’s time. Small, brittle leaves crunch
underfoot as I walk across tundra that’s already beginning to
freeze for the long winter ahead.
The
top of the world is a cold place. I’ve been at a field camp here in
the Canadian high Arctic gathering climate change data from one of
the most remote and isolated regions of the planet. It is barren,
wild and beautiful. Yet this place is not beyond the reach of our
carbon emissions.
The
land up here is warming faster than most of the planet. The 2013
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report projected that the
Arctic would warm much more rapidly than the global average, with
warming over the land far greater than over the ocean. And it is a
particularly sensitive land, where a diverse array of birds, mammals,
and plants eke out an existence through eight months of winter while
relying on a delicate balance of summer temperatures.
As
a doctoral candidate at McGill University in Montreal, I have spent
three years researching how the planet’s changing climate is
affecting the polar desert ecology of the high Arctic. It’s
precisely this balance of climate and permafrost, ice and ecosystems
that I’ve come here to study.
In
this wide-open space, with all its dangers and difficulties, lies a
land that is deservedly called the Garden Spot of the Arctic. More
than 600 miles north of Alaska, it harbors more than 150 species of
brightly flowering plants. This is where the North American continent
has ended and broken into a disjointed network of islands, some of
the largest and least explored on earth.
It’s
a difficult place to call home. The polar desert differs from the
lower Arctic by its extreme dryness, relative lack of plant life, and
brutally cold winters. It would remind me of Middle Eastern deserts —
dusty soil, dry riverbeds, spattered flecks of vegetation, beautiful
rock formations — if it were not surrounded by towering mountains
and ice caps.
Vast
stretches of flat, dry desert are cracked by the harsh winters into
miles of patterned ground. The winter shatters the land into an array
of shapes – polygonal patterns that repeat endlessly over vast
distances. They are underlain by massive bodies of buried ice that
sit in a fine equilibrium with the surrounding permafrost.
Permafrost
occurs in polar and alpine areas where the ground temperature remains
below 32 degrees Fahrenheit for many years. But as the planet warms,
permafrost can thaw. Together with the melting of ground ice (known
as thermokarst), it creates the potential for enormous changes in the
Arctic landscape.
The
dynamics of thermokarst are of particular interest to Arctic
scientists. Wayne Pollard of McGill is a 25-year veteran of high
Arctic permafrost research. He has been coming here to study the
various thaw processes that give rise to the area’s unique
landforms.
“Most
importantly under today’s climate,” he says, “are the potential
impacts of global warming on permafrost temperature and distribution,
which would affect surface erosion and vegetation through runoff and
thaw.”
Dr.
Pollard has been studying a particular kind of thermokarst landform
known as a thaw slump – a vertical exposure of massive buried ice
that begins to melt more and more of the ground when exposed to
summer air temperatures. These visually impressive features resemble
large mudslides eating their way across the surface of the polar
desert.
While
they are a natural part of the landscape’s evolution, it is the
current change in their frequency and distribution that may signify
the effects of a warming climate.
The summer of 2012 was one of the hottest on record for the Canadian high Arctic, with an average high in July of 54 degrees Fahrenheit and some days approaching 70. The relatively sweltering heat under the 24-hour sun caused hordes of mosquitoes to erupt, driving the resident wildlife and us nearly insane with their attacks. During that trip north, Dr. Pollard noted not just that there was a 30 percent increase in the number of thaw slumps, but that they were also causing the highest amount of erosion ever observed for this area.
“The
broader scientific community supports the idea that extreme summers
like 2012 are a sign of increased global warming in polar regions,”
he said. “One year on its own can be a simple anomaly; however,
several summers within a fixed time period, about 10 years, is more
likely part of a longer-term trend.” And whether this trend is part
of a natural cycle of warming or linked to human factors, he
continued, “is still difficult to resolve.”
Much
of the region is still developing, in geologic terms: Areas of lower
elevation are relatively young, having risen from the sea as little
as 1,000 years ago. Teasing out the effects of climate change, as
opposed to natural landscape processes, requires careful analysis.
One
way to do this is to examine parallel lines of climate research to
see if the trend is detected elsewhere.
On
neighboring Axel Heiberg Island, glaciologists Miles Ecclestone of
Trent University and Luke Copland of the University of Ottawa are
measuring how much mass the glaciers are losing. One hunk of ice in
particular, the White Glacier, has one of the longest monitoring
program of any glacier in the Canadian Arctic.
“The
mass balance and ice core records tell us that recent climate
patterns are unusually warm, particularly since the mid-1990s,” Dr.
Copeland says. “For the White Glacier, these past two decades of
annual mass balance measurement have been overwhelmingly negative;
indeed, most glacier mass balances are becoming increasingly
negative” — the greatest losses, he added, since records began in
the 1950s.
This
means that hot summers are becoming more frequent — an ominous sign
for polar desert ecosystems that rely on stable ground ice. In
addition to the catastrophic collapses of thaw slumps, melting ice
causes depressions in the ground that collect snow and water runoff
that give rise to meadow and wetland communities in place of desert.
Already
there are signs of greening in the high Arctic. And simulated warming
sites across the region predict a broad array of changes in plant
communities.
The
effects of warming don’t stop at the green stuff. Changes in a
plant community cascade up the food web to the grazing musk oxen,
hares and other herbivores that live in the desert. And while a
greener Arctic with more vegetation sounds like a boon to the animals
that eat the plants, the end results are not so simple.
Paradoxically,
any beneficial effects of a warmer climate on herbivores’ food
sources could be offset by rising humidity. That, in turn, means more
snowfall, which blankets the plants that the musk ox, the largest
Arctic herbivore, needs to survive.
Niels
Martin Schmidt is the scientific leader of Zackenberg Research
Station in northeastern Greenland, a latitude similar to the Canadian
high Arctic. He has been studying the plant-herbivore interactions of
musk oxen in Greenland and finding that changing winter conditions
regulate their populations.
In
particular, after snow-rich winters, the musk oxen have a much harder
time getting to their food source and surviving these harsh
conditions, and an increase in starved carcasses are found across the
area.
If
the duration of winter declines, Dr. Schmidt says, the population of
musk oxen may gain in the short term. But “in the long run, higher
temperatures will lead to fewer musk oxen, because of more unstable
winter conditions.”
The
high Arctic is changing. The interactions among all the elements of
the region are complex, especially given the added influence of
human-driven climate change. And that’s the particular threat of
climate change: When we disturb one aspect of the system, we affect
all the other parts that rely on it, with unforeseen consequences for
the Arctic and the entire planet
The thaw continues a pace and with it the entire eco-system changes
ReplyDelete"And while a greener Arctic with more vegetation sounds like a boon to the animals that eat the plants, the end results are not so simple."
"Paradoxically, any beneficial effects of a warmer climate on herbivores’ food sources could be offset by rising humidity. That, in turn, means more snowfall, which blankets the plants that the musk ox, the largest Arctic herbivore, needs to survive."
I notice in this article that the ice shows lots of dark flecks which is presumably crushed rock and gravel from the glacial grinding or more probably ash, soot from the thousands of forest fires raging in Siberia and pollution generally that collectively reduces the Ice caps albido effect.
Bye bye icecaps, we loved you.