| Literature DB >> 32355370 |
Sally Rangecroft1,2, Andrew J Suggitt1, Karen Anderson1, Stephan Harrison2.
Abstract
Water resources in many of the world's arid mountain ranges are threatened by climate change, and in parts of the South American Andes this is exacerbated by glacier recession and population growth. Alternative sources of water, such as more resilient permafrost features (e.g. rock glaciers), are expected to become increasingly important as current warming continues. Assessments of current and future permafrost extent under climate change are not available for the Southern Hemisphere, yet are required to inform decision making over future water supply and climate change adaptation strategies. Here, downscaled model outputs were used to calculate the projected changes in permafrost extent for a first-order assessment of an example region, the Bolivian Andes. Using the 0 °C mean annual air temperature as a proxy for permafrost extent, these projections show that permafrost areas will shrink from present day extent by up to 95 % under warming projected for the 2050s and by 99 % for the 2080s (under the IPCC A1B scenario, given equilibrium conditions). Using active rock glaciers as a proxy for the lower limit of permafrost extent, we also estimate that projected temperature changes would drive a near total loss of currently active rock glaciers in this region by the end of the century. In conjunction with glacier recession, a loss of permafrost extent of this magnitude represents a water security problem for the latter part of the 21st century, and it is likely that this will have negative effects on one of South America's fastest growing cities (La Paz), with similar implications for other arid mountain regions.Entities:
Keywords: Climate Change Adaptation; Glacial Lake Outburst Flood; Glacier Recession; Rock Glacier; Water Security
Year: 2016 PMID: 32355370 PMCID: PMC7175727 DOI: 10.1007/s10584-016-1655-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clim Change ISSN: 0165-0009 Impact factor: 4.743
Fig. 1Present and future Mean Annual Air Temperatures (MAATs) for the study region. Present day (1950–2000) MAATs using WorldClim data (left panel). Multimodel ensemble mean projected MAAT from 7 downscaled GCMs for the IPCC A1B scenario for South America, generated from 2050s (middle) and 2080s (right) warming data. Figure was generated in ArcGIS 10.1, data with permission from ClimGen
Fig. 2Climate change will reduce the area of land suitable for permafrost. Maps illustrate areas of present day and future projected Mean Annual Air Temperature (MAAT) below a suitability threshold of 0 °C, as a proxy for permafrost extent. a) Present day land area below a suitability threshold of 0 °C (blue coloration). b) Shrinkage of land area below a threshold MAAT of 0 °C in four example landscapes where rock glaciers are present in the Bolivian Andes. Figures were generated in ArcGIS 10.1
The percentage of Bolivian land area above 3500 m suitable for permafrost in the present day (1950–2000), changes in this area under projected climate warming and estimated number of rock glaciers remaining active given this warming. Seven isothermic thresholds for permafrost suitability were applied (MAAT range − 4 to +2 °C). The loss in land area under each of these thresholds due to future climate warming was calculated, based on the ensemble mean (in bold) and the range across models (in brackets). The number of rock glaciers estimated to remain active under each isothermic threshold for the ensemble mean are also shown for 2050s and 2080s warming. Values for the commonly cited MAAT threshold of 0 °C are shaded
| Isothermic threshold | % Land area below threshold (present day) | % Loss in land area below threshold due to warming (ensemble range) | Number of rock glaciers estimated to remain active | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| With 2050s warming | With 2080s warming | With 2050s warming | With 2080s warming | ||
| < −4 °C | 7.3 × 10−3 | 98.5 (94.7–100.0) | 100.0 (100.0) | 0 | 0 |
| < −3 °C | 2.6 × 10−2 | 96.0 (94.0–98.5) | 100.0 (100.0) | 0 | 0 |
| < −2 °C | 7.1 × 10−2 | 96.7 (95.1–97.3) | 99.6 (98.4–100.0) | 0 | 0 |
| < −1 °C | 2.2 × 10−1 | 95.9 (93.5–97.4) | 99.3 (99.0–99.5) | 0 | 0 |
| < 0 °C | 5.6 × 10−1 | 95.0 (92.7–96.5) | 99.4 (98.2–99.6) | 0 | 0 |
| < +1 °C | 1.4 | 94.2 (91.4–95.9) | 98.9 (98.0–99.3) | 3 | 0 |
| < +2 °C | 3.0 | 92.1 (88.8–94.5) | 98.5 (97.5–99.0) | 17 | 1 |
Fig. 3The present day MAAT at active rock glacier sites in the Bolivian Andes, plotted against site elevation. Figure was generated in SPSS
Fig. 4An example from the Cordillera Real region of the spatial comparison of Gruber’s (2012) Permafrost Zonation Index (pink coloration) with our MAAT 0 °C isotherm mapping (blue), highlighting the high level of agreement (purple). Figure was generated in ArcGIS 10.1