NASA
Discovers Bubbling Lakes In The Remote Arctic - A Sign Of Global
Warming
30
August, 2018
NASA
has released videos of bubbling lakes in the remote Arctic tundra,
where warming continues to release greenhouse gases into the
atmosphere at unprecedented rates.
The
international research team, funded by NASA as part of their
Arctic-Boreal Vulnerability Experiment (ABoVE), recently published
their results in Nature Communications. What they found are bubbling
lakes as greenhouse gases are released from the previously frozen
ground, leading to increased greenhouse gas emissions and a warming
positive feedback.
The
Arctic is one of the largest natural reservoirs of organic carbon,
trapped within the frozen soils. If a tree dies, say in the Amazon
rainforest, it is quickly eaten (rot) away by bacteria, which respire
the same as humans. As bacteria eat the tree they inhale oxygen and
release carbon dioxide. Hence, the carbon taken up by the tree
through photosynthesis is then released back into the atmosphere as
carbon dioxide for the cycle to start all over again.
However,
in the case of the Arctic, when something dies (trees, algae,
animals, etc.) they are immediately frozen. This, in essence, stops
the carbon cycle as both bacteria and their food are frozen in place
for potentially tens of thousands of years. This means the Arctic
continues to pack away carbon from the atmosphere and store it in
frozen soil, which can be over 250 feet thick.
However,
when that soil begins to thaw, the bacteria wake up and find a feast
of untouched carbon laid out for them, they begin to eat the carbon,
releasing carbon dioxide and methane gas as they do. In the NASA
video what you see is the resulting carbon dioxide and methane gases
released from the thawing of Arctic lake beds. As the sediment
beneath these lakes begins to melt, they become greenhouse gas
factories.
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