Glacier algae accelerate melt rates on the south-western Greenland Ice Sheet

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License: CC BY 4.0
Serval ID
serval:BIB_B1F42671BD8C
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Title
Glacier algae accelerate melt rates on the south-western Greenland Ice Sheet
Journal
The Cryosphere
Author(s)
Cook Joseph M., Tedstone Andrew J., Williamson Christopher, McCutcheon Jenine, Hodson Andrew J., Dayal Archana, Skiles McKenzie, Hofer Stefan, Bryant Robert, McAree Owen, McGonigle Andrew, Ryan Jonathan, Anesio Alexandre M., Irvine-Fynn Tristram D. L., Hubbard Alun, Hanna Edward, Flanner Mark, Mayanna Sathish, Benning Liane G., van As Dirk, Yallop Marian, McQuaid James B., Gribbin Thomas, Tranter Martyn
ISSN
1994-0424
Publication state
Published
Issued date
29/01/2020
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
14
Number
1
Pages
309-330
Language
english
Abstract
Melting of the Greenland Ice Sheet (GrIS) is the largest single contributor to eustatic sea level and is amplified by the growth of pigmented algae on the ice surface, which increases solar radiation absorption. This biological albedo-reducing effect and its impact upon sea level rise has not previously been quantified. Here, we combine field spectroscopy with a radiative-transfer model, supervised classification of unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) and satellite remote-sensing data, and runoff modelling to calculate biologically driven ice surface ablation. We demonstrate that algal growth led to an additional 4.4–6.0 Gt of runoff from bare ice in the south-western sector of the GrIS in summer 2017, representing 10 %–13 % of the total. In localized patches with high biomass accumulation, algae accelerated melting by up to 26.15±3.77 % (standard error, SE). The year 2017 was a high-albedo year, so we also extended our analysis to the particularly low-albedo 2016 melt season. The runoff from the south-western bare-ice zone attributed to algae was much higher in 2016 at 8.8–12.2 Gt, although the proportion of the total runoff contributed by algae was similar at 9 %–13 %. Across a 10 000 km2 area around our field site, algae covered similar proportions of the exposed bare ice zone in both years (57.99 % in 2016 and 58.89 % in 2017), but more of the algal ice was classed as “high biomass” in 2016 (8.35 %) than 2017 (2.54 %). This interannual comparison demonstrates a positive feedback where more widespread, higher-biomass algal blooms are expected to form in high-melt years where the winter snowpack retreats further and earlier, providing a larger area for bloom development and also enhancing the provision of nutrients and liquid water liberated from melting ice. Our analysis confirms the importance of this biological albedo feedback and that its omission from predictive models leads to the systematic underestimation of Greenland's future sea level contribution, especially because both the bare-ice zones available for algal colonization and the length of the biological growth season are set to expand in the future.
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
29/08/2024 10:03
Last modification date
22/11/2024 11:02
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