Monday, September 26, 2016

Alaska Scientists on Climate Data Quest Get Rare View of Parks

Great images as we travel with scientist and their equipment that is helping us track changes in our environment and man's ability to bring our eco-systems back in balance.

Alaska Scientists on Climate Data Quest Get Rare View of Parks

  
Fly with Scientists Seeking Climate Data in Alaska's Gates of the Arctic National Park 2:59 
The National Park Service turns 100 years old this month. Fifty-nine U.S. National Parks cover almost 52 million acres across 27 different states. Last year, they saw a record 305 million visitors. To recognize the centennial of the system protecting these American treasures, NBC News will feature stories from 10 national parks and recreation areas — from California's Yosemite to New York's Gateway.

Alaska is big. It's so big that it's home to two-thirds of America's national park land — that's 84,000 square miles, twice as much land as all the Lower 48 national parks combined.
In these vast expanses of wilderness, where there are few trails and even fewer roads, it's still possible to tread where no human footsteps have gone before. "I've wondered that, in a number of these locations, if we were the first ones there," said Pam Sousanes, a scientist studying climate in Alaska's national parks, "and maybe some of the only people that have ever stood on that spot."

Each summer, Sousanes and coworker Ken Hill — both of them national park physical scientists — enjoy an unusual ride to work. Today's first stop is a rocky ridge in Gates of the Arctic National Park, a roadless wilderness larger than Massachusetts. During a 60-mile flight from Bettles (year-round population: 12), their helicopter offers them expansive views of the Brooks Range before settling on a narrow patch of tundra overlooking a U-shaped valley.


Image: Scientists perform an annual check at the Pamichtuk Lake climate monitoring station


Physical scientists Ken Hill and Pam Sousanes perform an annual maintenance check and data download at the Pamichtuk Lake climate monitoring station in Gates of the Arctic National Park in the Brooks Range of Alaska. John Brecher / NBC News
Perched here is a metal tripod. Every hour, its instruments record temperature, humidity, wind speed and direction, snow depth, precipitation and other conditions. Sousanes and Hill give it an annual check up —making sure no bears chewed off any parts — and download a year's worth of climate data before boarding the helicopter for the next remote site.

The point of this activity is to help park scientists understand what kind of weather precedes a local event such as a big fire season, or a sheep die-off, or permafrost melting. At a larger scale, data from this station combine with other records over the decades to tell bigger stories, for example that 2014 and 2015 were respectively the warmest years on record across the state of Alaska.

More than playgrounds for recreational visitors, national parks are also workplaces for scientists. "They're huge laboratories," said Margaret Beer, communication specialist with the park service's Inventory and Monitoring Program. "The science that emanates is significant."

To understand the parks better, the park service employs hundreds of scientists with expertise in these fields and more — biology, botany, wildlife, climate, social science, glaciers, caves, geology, ecology, hydrology, geomorphology, acoustics, marine mammals, ocean water quality, epidemiology.
Examples of ongoing projects include:
  • Ecologists kayaking the underwater rivers of Mammoth Cave National Park (and other regional cave systems), counting the underground lifeforms that exist there and monitoring their populations against changes in water quality.
  • Field biologists hiking to the alpine lakes of Sequoia, Kings Canyon and Yosemite National Parks to collect water samples and survey amphibian populations. They seek to measure how particles of air pollution—blowing into the lakes from upwind agriculture and industry—affect the water's chemistry and the creatures living there.
  • Marine ecologists scuba diving in Dry Tortugas National Park (and other parks in South Florida and the Caribbean), tracking how populations of globally threatened coral reef species are changing over time.
  • Biologists collaring and observing grizzly bears along the coast of Alaska in Katmai National Park, monitoring their consumption of clams and other invertebrates to understand how threats to the marine environment could affect bear populations.
Back in Bettles, Alaska, after a day spent choppering from one rarefied perch to another, Sousanes said she loves her work, both for the spectacular views of her state's national parks and the climate data it yields.
"I pretty much know in my heart and my gut that these stations are going to provide very useful information for the next 50 years," she said. "And that's a pretty good feeling, to know you're behind something that's relevant and going to make a difference."


Image: Wildflowers bloom in tundra near Pamichtuk Lake


Wildflowers bloom in tundra near Pamichtuk Lake in Gates of the Arctic National Park in the Brooks Range of Alaska. John Brecher / NBC News

Gates of the Arctic National Park

Location: Alaska's Brooks Range (America's farthest north national park).
Size: 8.4 million acres
Wildlife: Caribou, grizzly bear, Dall's sheep, wolverine, moose, musk ox, arctic terns, arctic ground squirrels, fox.
Noteworthy features: North of the Arctic Circle means summer days without sunsets (and long winter nights). Most visitors fly in on small planes. Hiking is challenging with cold river crossings, alder thickets, tussocks and no maintained trails. Winter temperatures reach -50 degrees F.

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