Growing Arctic Carbon Emissions Could Go Unobserved
27
June, 2016
A
new NASA-led study has found that in at least part of the Arctic,
scientists are not doing as good a job of detecting changes in carbon
dioxide during the long, dark winter months as they are at monitoring
changes during the short summer. That's a concern, because growing
Arctic plants can act as a brake on global warming rates by removing
carbon from the atmosphere, but increasing cold-season emissions
could overwhelm the braking effect and accelerate global warming.
Led
by Nicholas Parazoo of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena,
California, the new study compares our ability to observe increases
in cold-season emissions of carbon dioxide and increases in
warm-season removal of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. The
cold-season emissions come mainly from deep soil layers that retain
enough summer heat to remain thawed after the soil's surface freezes
in the fall. As the climate continues to warm, these buried layers
are expected to remain unfrozen later and later into the winter,
releasing more and more carbon. It will be important for scientists
to track these releases carefully.
However,
it's hard to monitor carbon dioxide in the Far North. Alaska is more
accessible than most of the Arctic, but most of the state is too
remote and rugged for ground measurements to be collected. Satellite
and airborne measurements fill these geographical gaps, but their
higher-altitude measurements capture carbon dioxide that drifted into
the state from sources that may be far outside the Arctic, as well as
the locally produced gas, making small local changes hard to spot.
Local
and long-distance carbon
Parazoo
and his co-authors conducted a series of simulations with a global
carbon forecast model. First they predicted how carbon dioxide will
change as plants grow and deep soil layers thaw, then they simulated
how well those changes could be observed if today's airborne and
satellite measurements continued unchanged in the future. They used
airborne data collected from 2009 to 2013 by NASA's Carbon in Arctic
Reservoirs Vulnerability Experiment (CARVE) and the National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA) Global Greenhouse Gas
Reference Network, as well as satellite data from the Japanese
Greenhouse Gas Observing Satellite (GOSAT).
The
researchers found that all measurements were dominated by carbon that
originated elsewhere, with only 10 percent of carbon coming from
Alaska sources. Isolating that small amount and then monitoring how
it may be changing as the climate changes is difficult. However,
because CARVE and NOAA research aircraft collect data at multiple
altitudes, the measurements provide information about how carbon
dioxide changes with altitude. Removing upper-altitude measurements,
the team found that lower-altitude carbon dioxide was about half
locally produced. That makes it easier to track changes in the local
carbon dioxide. Aircraft also can collect data much later in the year
than currently orbiting satellites, which require abundant sunlight
to make their measurements. These characteristics mean that aircraft
have the potential to monitor increases in cold-season emissions.
Airborne
measurements are key
The
study suggests that year-round airborne measurements across the state
are the key to monitoring carbon changes, but there is no ongoing
airborne program currently doing year-round carbon monitoring in
Alaska. The scientists concluded that an expanded network of aircraft
measurements could provide the temporal and spatial coverage needed
to avoid future emissions going unwatched.
Parazoo
noted that several large-scale planning efforts are underway for
future Alaskan and Arctic observing systems, so now is a critical
time to develop new strategies and technologies that focus on these
vital cold-season measurements. "We know [the Arctic] has the
potential to change through warming and permafrost thaw, and those
changes would have global impacts," he said. "We want to
have the scientific capability to measure and interpret those changes
when and if they happen. Our results suggest we can use aircraft data
to detect those changes in as little as 30 years."
A
paper on the research, "Detecting Regional Patterns of Changing
CO2 Flux in Alaska," is published today in the Proceedings of
the National Academy of Sciences.
NASA
collects data from space, air, land and sea to increase our
understanding of our home planet, improve lives and safeguard our
future. NASA develops new ways to observe and study Earth's
interconnected natural systems with long-term data records. The
agency freely shares this unique knowledge and works with
institutions around the world to gain new insights into how our
planet is changing.
For
more information about NASA's Earth science activities, visit:
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