Site icon Conservation news

Alaska – climate change causing ancient lakes and wetlands to be replaced by forest




Alaska – climate change causing ancient lakes and wetlands to be replaced by forest

Alaska – climate change causing ancient lakes and wetlands to be replaced by forest
James E. Kloeppel, Physical Sciences Editor
National Research Council of Canada press release
September 28, 2005



Ottawa, September 28, 2005 – Lakes and wetlands in the Kenai Peninsula of south-central Alaska are drying at a significant rate. The shift seems to be driven by climate change, and could endanger waterfowl habitats and hasten the spread of wildfires.

In a paper published in the August 2005 issue of the NRC Research Press’ Canadian Journal of Forest Research, Eric Klein and his colleagues document a significant landscape shift from wetlands to woodland and forest in the Kenai Peninsula Lowlands.

The trend fits within a global picture of drying wetlands in northern latitudes, with similar changes already appearing in lower latitudes. Klein, a biologist who did his graduate research with Alaska Pacific University, says the transformation of Alaska’s landscape corresponds with an increase in temperatures over the past 100 years. “When you look at the climatologic data, it shows a warming trend. This is just one of the physical manifestations of that trend that is hard to refute.”

The researchers compared aerial photos of the Kenai Peninsula taken in 1950 and 1996. Combined with extensive field study and analysis of vegetation, the research confirms that the Kenai Peninsula is becoming woodier and dryer. In the areas studied, wooded areas increased from 57 percent to 73 percent from 1950 to 1996, while wetland areas decreased from 5 percent to 1 percent.

The results confirm what the researchers could see for themselves. “It’s very clear when you fly over closed basin lakes, many of which are the kettle ponds left after the glaciers receded,” says Klein. “They have a kind of apron, or area between the water and mature forest, and you can see it getting larger as the water goes down.”

Global temperatures have increased by about 0.6°C over the past 100 years. The rate of temperature increase from 1976 to the present has been double that from 1910 to 1945 – greater than at any other time during the last 1,000 years.


Capturing and storing the carbon dioxide could be key in minimizing climate change – 26-September-2005
A new assessment report finalized here today by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) concludes that capturing and storing the carbon dioxide (CO2) produced by power plants and factories before it enters the atmosphere could play a major role in minimizing climate change.

Summers in arctic getting longer and hotter – 23-September-2005
In a paper that shows dramatic summer warming in arctic Alaska, scientists synthesized a decade of field data from Alaska showing summer warming is occurring primarily on land, where a longer snow-free season has contributed more strongly to atmospheric heating than have changes in vegetation.

Hurricane Katrina damage just a dose of what’s to come 21-September-2005
The kind of devastation seen on the Gulf Coast from Hurricane Katrina may be a small taste of what is to come if emissions of the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide (CO2 ) are not diminished soon, warns Dr. Ken Caldeira of the Carnegie Institution’s Department of Global Ecology in his opening remarks at the 7th International Carbon Dioxide Conference in Boulder, Colorado, September 26, 2005.


90% of largest companies concerned about climate change — survey 18-September-2005
More U.S. corporations than ever before now factor climate change into the risks and opportunities faced by their businesses, according to a report released today by the Carbon Disclosure Project, a coalition of institutional investors with more than $21 trillion in assets. Increased interest from the investment community, in conjunction with related macro-economic developments, is encouraging the development of strategies to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.


Humans impacted climate thousands of years ago September 9, 2005
New research suggests humans were influencing the world’s climate long before the Industrial Revolution. Atmospheric levels of methane, a potent greenhouse gas, climbed steadily during the first millennium due to massive fires set by humans clearing land for agriculture. The research, published in this week’s Science, is detailed below in three presss releases from sponsoring institutions.


Carbon reinjection strategies to be affected by climate change September 8, 2005

An Earth System model developed by researchers at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign indicates that the best location to store carbon dioxide in the deep ocean will change with climate change. The direct injection of carbon dioxide deep into the ocean has been suggested as one method to help control rising carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere and mitigate the effects of global warming. But, because the atmosphere interacts with the oceans, the net uptake of carbon dioxide and the oceans’ sequestration capacity could be affected by climate change.


Ocean gas hydrates could trigger catastrophic climate change September 6, 2005
Global warming will cause gasses trapped beneath the ocean floor to release into the atmosphere according to research presented at the Annual Conference of the Royal Geographical Society. The impact could initiate a catastrophic global greenhouse effect.

Global warming may have triggered worst mass extinction August 29, 2005
A dramatic rise in carbon dioxide 250 million years ago may have caused global temperatures to soar and result in Earth’s greatest mass extinction, according to a study published in the September issue of Geology. Global warming, which may have produced temperatures 10 to 30 degrees Celsius higher than today, would have had a significant impact both on oceans, where about 95% of lifeforms became extinct, and on land, where almost 75% of species died out.

Over the past 30 years, temperatures in the Kenai Peninsula have increased 0.7°C. In the last 15 to 25 years, species such as dwarf birch, blueberries and black spruce have grown up in areas where wetlands had existed for 8,000 to 12,000 years. “These areas used to be soggy bogs with sphagnum peat moss, and no shrubs or trees,” says Dr. Ed Berg, an ecologist with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. “The evidence for this is that when you dig down into the peat, you don’t see any stems or shrubs. Had they grown there in the past, they would have been preserved because peat preserves things very well.”

Wetlands are hotspots for biodiversity. The shift to woodland and forest means loss of many types of wetland vegetation and fewer habitats for migratory birds. The greater forest cover also creates a continuous swath of vegetation that helps wildfires to spread more quickly.

Similar drying is happening outside the Kenai Peninsula. “It’s certainly happening in Alaska on a very broad scale,” says Dr. Berg. “Much of the interior is showing the same kind of drying pattern.”

If the warming trend continues, Alaska’s lakes and wetlands will continue to disappear, creating a dryer landscape in the long term.

Klein says that Alaska’s transformation is another piece of evidence in the climate change puzzle. “The bottom line is that a change is happening,” he says. “There is an overall environment shift occurring in Alaska, and especially in the northern hemisphere. I think it’s a bioindicator of climate change and what is happening to the planet as a whole.”

The Canadian Journal of Forest Research is a scientific peer-reviewed journal published by the NRC Research Press, the publishing arm of the Canada Institute for Scientific and Technical Information (CISTI).

For the complete article, see http://pubs.nrc-cnrc.gc.ca/cgi-bin/rp/rp2_abst_e?cjfr_x05-129_35_ns_nf_cjfr8-05.

About the Canada Institute for Scientific and Technical Information

As an institute of the National Research Council of Canada (NRC), the Canada Institute for Scientific and Technical Information (CISTI) is one of the world’s leading sources for information in all areas of science, technology, medicine and engineering. It is also Canada’s foremost publisher of scientific journals and books, through the NRC Research Press, its publishing arm. With the ever-growing knowledge-based economy, CISTI is also increasingly considered a key strategic component of Canada’s science and technology information infrastructure. Visit CISTI at http://cisti.nrc.gc.ca.

This is a modified press release from the National Research Council of Canada. The original version is found at Climate change transforming Alaska’s landscape



Exit mobile version