New Search For Global Warming At Poles
February 26, 2007
(Christian Science Monitor) This article was written
by Peter N. Spotts.
For
the next two years, the coldest places on Earth will become
some of the hottest laboratories in the history of modern science.
This Thursday marks the official start of the International
Polar Year (IPY), an unprecedented research assault on Antarctica
and the Arctic.
Some 10,000 scientists from more than 60 countries launched
the push because of significant changes they see taking place
at these frozen ends of the Earth. Many hold that global warming
is triggering these changes, including shrinking sea ice in
the Arctic Ocean, thawing permafrost, and growing instability
in Greenland's ice cap and in some floes coursing through Antarctica's
ice cap.
The U.S. kicks off its part of the $1.5-billion project with
opening ceremonies Tuesday in Washington.
The goal is to gain a deeper understanding of processes affecting
everything from the flow of glaciers, and key features of polar
climate to plankton and polar bears. In addition, researchers
plan to leave a legacy of networked, standard sensors and buoys
that will help track changes in these crucial regions long after
the IPY ends.
Why North And South Poles Matter
At first glance, the poles may seem too remote to matter to
anyone who doesn't live there. But Earth's "cryosphere" — its
high-latitude regions of snow and ice — represents a central
piece of the climate system. The poles act as sinks for the
heat generated in the tropics and carried toward higher latitudes
by the oceans and atmosphere. Over many centuries, the ice caps
on Greenland and Antarctica hold the key to future sea-level
rise as the climate warms up north.
Thus, the hidden hand of a changing Arctic reaches farther south
than icebergs alone suggest.
"There is no magic curtain that drops down at 60 degrees north,"
says ice scientist Jacqueline Richter-Menge, who heads climate-related
research at the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers' Cold Regions Research
and Engineering Laboratory in Hanover, N.H.
Changes in ecosystems
For instance, ecosystems stretching from the Labrador Sea to
the continental shelf off North Carolina are changing because
colder, less-salty water is flowing along the continental shelf
from the Arctic Ocean into the northwest Atlantic, according
to two Cornell University scientists. Many researchers attribute
the Arctic Ocean's freshening to global warming.
The scientists note that while overfishing triggered the collapse
of lucrative cod fishing off the Canadian Maritime Provinces,
this fresher, colder water along the shelf has hindered the
cod's recovery there compared with stocks farther south.
In their place, marine life, including shrimp and snow crab,
that cod would have eaten are flourishing. The changes in water
conditions have altered the timing for peak production among
tiny plankton that nourish creatures higher up the food chain.
"These timing changes are going to lead to changes in the ecosystem.
There will be winners and losers in the ecosystem. And there
will be winners and losers in society," says Charles Greene,
a Cornell oceanographer who was a co-author of the report.
Meanwhile, in the south, scientists working on the global Census
of Marine Life say they see biologically significant shifts
in marine life along the sea floor that once anchored two large
ice shelves known as Larson A and B. They broke away from the
Antarctic Peninsula over the past 12 years.
"The more we understand what's going on, the more winners there
will be," Dr. Greene says.
International Grass-Roots Effort
The IPY coincides with the 50th anniversary of the International
Geophysical Year (IGY), the first postwar effort to study the
entire planet, from the deep-sea floor and below to the outermost
reaches of the atmosphere. Although this year's effort is dubbed
the polar year, it spans two years to allow scientists to track
conditions at both poles through a complete summer-winter-summer
cycle.
The IPY includes more biology and ecology to better gauge the
effect changes are having on plants and animals, as well as
on the organic carbon stored in frozen tundra. Scientists say
that as the Arctic in particular warms, they expect this carbon
to reach the atmosphere as carbon dioxide and methane — turning
the Great White North into a source of heat-trapping greenhouse
gases.
Unlike the IGY, "this is a very grass-roots effort," says Robin
Bell, a senior scientist at the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory
in Palisades, N.Y.
Last week, Dr. Bell and colleagues described how lakes in the
right location beneath Antarctic ice "rivers" accelerate the
ice's movement toward the sea.
The poles "are the parts of the planet changing most rapidly"
with global warming, she says. Understanding them is key to
understanding how the rest of the planet is likely to respond.
© 2007 The Christian
Science Monitor. All rights reserved.
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