Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Mountain lakes losing colour from climate change

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Sep, 2021 03:45 PM
  • Mountain lakes losing colour from climate change

The distinctive milky turquoise of mountain lakes is going the way of the glaciers that feed them, according to new research.

"A lot of the turquoise glacial lakes in the Canadian Rockies are clearing up," said Rolf Vinebrooke, who studies such lakes at the University of Alberta. "They're turning more the blue colour that people think of as normal lakes."

The delicate, translucent celadon that says "alpine" to mountain-lovers everywhere comes from glacial meltwater. Even small glaciers are massive rivers of ice that can pulverize rock into flour-fine particles and it's those particles that tint the lakes.

"The sunlight reflects off these white particles," said Vinebrooke, who published his finding in the latest State of the Mountains report for the Alpine Club of Canada. "Because of the scattering of the light as it hits these particles, the lake takes on this turquoise colour."

Glaciers, though, have been hard hit by climate change. And not just the big ones.

"Between the '70s and the '90s, when nobody was talking about global warming, a lot of these smaller glaciers had already melted and disappeared."

Vinebrooke took archival pictures of many lakes shot in the middle of the last century and compared them to modern images. Even in the black-and-white of the earlier pictures, the change was evident.

Then, the researchers took sediment cores from the bottom of the lakes. Sediment cores reveal a lake's history much like the layers of growth in a tree trunk.

"We were looking for clear blue mountain lakes," Vinebrooks said. "We found them, then we realized when we took these sediment cores that they had only been a clear blue colour for the last couple decades.

"We found a lot of lakes that are clear now, but just a few decades ago were turquoise. Their small glacier had melted."

The colour change didn't happen everywhere, but it happened frequently. It also appears to have happened fairly quickly.

"In the span of a few years, it shifts over and the lake goes clear," said Vinebrooke.

He said it's happening right now in places like Geraldine Lakes, a series of alpine lakes in Jasper National Park.

"We've got multiple lines of evidence that show all that pretty convincingly."

Vinebrooke said a clear blue lake admits much more sunlight into depths than a lake clouded with glacial flour. That's likely to bring in a much different local ecology, he said

"You increase the potential for that lake to be more productive because there's more microscopic algal growth in those lakes."

But there are winners and losers.

Organisms adapted to the low light of milky waters are unlikely to survive what would be to them a harsh new glare of ultraviolet radiation. The problem is especially acute because of the speed of the transition.

"If you take that sunscreen away, some organisms may not be able to tolerate that increase in UV radiation. It doesn't give organisms time to adapt."

Vinebrooke suspects some lakes, at least temporarily, may be left "biologically impoverished" -- especially since so many are remote and in austere settings.

Ultimately, he said, it's one more example of climate change already working to alter familiar touchstones.

"It captures the here and now effects of global warming."

<

MORE National ARTICLES

Canada reopens border to vaccinated U.S. citizens

Canada reopens border to vaccinated U.S. citizens
As of 12:01 a.m. Monday, American citizens and permanent residents were allowed back on Canadian soil, provided they have had a full course of a COVID-19 vaccine approved by Health Canada.

Canada reopens border to vaccinated U.S. citizens

Pedestrian passes away after colliding with a garbage truck in Surrey

Pedestrian passes away after colliding with a garbage truck in Surrey
On August 6, 2021, at approximately 2:55 a.m., Surrey RCMP received a report of collision involving a garbage truck and a pedestrian in the 10600-block of King George Blvd.

Pedestrian passes away after colliding with a garbage truck in Surrey

B.C. fires front line of climate history: minister

B.C. fires front line of climate history: minister
Farnworth said a small group of residents in the Monte Lake area refused to leave their homes and had to be rescued by firefighters with the BC Wildfire Service after they were surrounded by fire.

B.C. fires front line of climate history: minister

COVID spike prompts new rules for B.C.'s Okanagan

COVID spike prompts new rules for B.C.'s Okanagan
Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry said the Delta variant is driving the rapid spread in the area, accounting for 80 per cent of the COVID-19 cases among those who aren't vaccinated or who have only had one shot.

COVID spike prompts new rules for B.C.'s Okanagan

464 COVID19 cases for Friday

464 COVID19 cases for Friday
81.8% (3,790,394) of eligible people 12 and older in B.C. have received their first dose of COVID-19 vaccine and 68.9% (3,195,128) received their second dose.

464 COVID19 cases for Friday

Health Canada adds Bell's Palsy to Pfizer label

Health Canada adds Bell's Palsy to Pfizer label
Health Canada says 311 patients in Canada reported a case of Bell's Palsy after getting a COVID-19 shot though that does not specifically mean the condition was caused by the vaccine.

Health Canada adds Bell's Palsy to Pfizer label