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Thursday 28 August 2008
by: Moises Velasquez-Manoff, The Christian Science Monitor
Melting glaciers, drier wetlands, warmer winters in Alaska, where global warming is felt most keenly.
Seward, Alaska - On the approach to Exit Glacier in
southeastern Alaska, wooden signs mark nearly 200 years of the ice's
retreat. They begin at 1815, about a mile and a half from the ice's
current terminus. That was the end of a several centuries-long cold
spell known as the Little Ice Age. Since then, the bluish ice has
receded up the valley at an average rate of 13 meters per year.
Scientists are quick to say that glaciers naturally come
and go and that no single phenomenon can be pegged with certainty to
human-induced climate change. (Exit Glacier began shrinking before the
Industrial Revolution greatly increased greenhouse gases, for one
thing.)
But the glacier's retreat is part of a greater trend. Ice
fields throughout the region are thinning. The pattern is apparent in
other parts of the world as well. With few exceptions, mountain
glaciers in Patagonia, the Himalayas, the Alps, the Rockies, and the
Andes - are shrinking. As Doug Causey, vice provost for research and
graduate studies at the University of Alaska, Anchorage, says, "We have
a pretty good idea of what causes ice to melt."
The world is warming. Average global temperatures have
increased by 1.36 degrees F. since the 19th century, according to the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. In the past 50 years, the
rate of warming has nearly doubled. The warming trend is even more
pronounced at high latitudes. Temperatures in Alaska have risen 3.6
degrees F. in the past half-century. The warmer conditions are changing
marine and terrestrial ecosystems and forcing human communities to
adapt as well.
Warmer winters have resulted in spruce bark beetles eating
through vast tracts of forest. Some wetlands appear to be drying out.
Several coastal villages previously protected by sea ice now find
themselves exposed to the ocean's full fury. They'll have to relocate.
"What's happening with climate change - it's not
speculation," says Colleen Swan, a tribal administrator of Kivalina, a
399-person Inupiat community on the Chukchi Sea. "It's our reality."
Alaskan glaciers are thinning at a rate of 1.8 meters yearly, according to laser measurements taken from aircraft.
"We're measuring almost a doubling in the rate of mass loss
over the last decade," says Anthony Arendt, a postdoctoral fellow at
the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Goddard Space
Flight Center.
The ice melting here is raising global sea levels by 0.27
millimeters yearly, nearly double what Greenland ice sheets contribute
now, Mr. Arendt says. So while all eyes are on the Greenland and
Antarctic ice sheets (which have the potential to raise the ocean level
7 and 5 meters, respectively), glaciers like these are already melting.
"In the next century or so, it's really these small regions, like
Alaska and Patagonia, that need attention," Arendt says.
In the late 1970s, the pattern of prevailing winds and
ocean currents here shifted, bringing warmer water into the area.
Scientists see this periodic shift as driving some of the changes. But
it doesn't account for everything, they say.
The higher temperatures also appear to be reshaping
ecosystems. In the past 15 years, the spruce bark beetle has decimated
forests in southern Alaska. Historically, outbreaks of the beetle occur
periodically, but this one seems extreme. In some areas, no mature
spruce remains alive, says Ed Berg, an ecologist with the US Department
of Fish and Wildlife.
Mr. Berg says milder winters - winter temperatures are
rising nearly three times as fast as summer - are especially to blame.
Cold winters used to keep the beetles in check. But in recent decades,
El Niño events (a periodic warming of the eastern Pacific), have become
more frequent. Add to that consecutive warm summers - beetles
proliferate rapidly after two in a row - and you've got a recipe for
out-of-control infestation, he says.
Wetlands are changing, too, says Berg, standing ankle-deep
in spongy peat moss in the Kenai National Wildlife Refuge. Material
from the bottom of this fen - about seven meters down - dates to 13,700
years ago, the end of the last ice age. Now shrubs and trees are
encroaching on what has been a peat moss-dominated bog. Cores taken
show no evidence of woody plants until the top, or recent decades.
Their arrival implies a drying-out, he says.
"It's a radical change after 15,000 years, to have shrubs come in like this," he says.
Northern sea ice cover has diminished dramatically in
summer, reaching a record low in 2007. The polar bear and its prey, the
ringed seal, are maybe the two best-known examples of wildlife hit hard
by receding ice. But there are many others. Mollusk-eating walruses
also use ice rafts as bases for foraging trips. But as summer ice has
shrunk, scientists in Russia and Alaska observe walruses hauling up on
land instead. Foraging from land may lessen the food available within
swimming distance, says Chad Jay, a research ecologist with the US
Geological Survey in Anchorage. It may also lead to overgrazing of
grounds within reach.
"If they're on the ice, they have a greater area they can
cover," he says. With less ice, "we're seeing a loss of their habitat,"
which limits their distribution.
Coastal Alaskan villages find that the vanishing sea ice
has left them exposed, and has vastly increased erosion. Shore ice used
to protect communities from waves during fall storms. No longer. "When
we get our fall storms, the ice is just not there," says Ms. Swan of
Kivalina. Three villages, Newtok, Shishmaref and Kivalina, will have to
relocate within 10 to 15 years due to accelerated erosion, says the US
Army Corps of Engineers. Some 160 other rural communities are at risk
from increased erosion.
The ice loss has also affected how native Alaskan villagers
hunt. The villagers subsist partially on wild-caught game. Previously,
hunters went perhaps 10 miles out on the ice during spring months in
search of whales. But the ice has thinned considerably.
"It's been very dangerous the last few years," says Enoch
Adams, Jr., chairman of the Kivalina relocation plan committee. "We
have to watch it more closely than we ever had to."
One recent study estimates that adapting state
infrastructure to climate change will cost around $6.6 billion by 2080
- and probably more, says coauthor Peter Larsen, now with the Nature
Conservancy in Anchorage. Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin has convened a
climate change subcabinet to advise on adaptation and mitigation
efforts.
The key is to be proactive rather than reactive, says Mr.
Larsen, an adviser to the effort. "If you spend more to adapt to the
change now, you definitely pay for the costs, and then some," later, he
says.
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