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JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH,
VOL. 111,
G04002,
doi:10.1029/2005JG000150,
2006
Shrinking ponds in subarctic Alaska based on 1950–2002 remotely sensed images
Brian Riordan
Bonanza Creek Long Term Ecological Research Program, University of Alaska, Fairbanks, Alaska, USA
David Verbyla
Bonanza Creek Long Term Ecological Research Program, University of Alaska, Fairbanks, Alaska, USA
A. David McGuire
Bonanza Creek Long Term Ecological Research Program, University of Alaska, Fairbanks, Alaska, USA
Abstract
Over the past 50 years, Alaska has experienced a warming climate with longer growing seasons, increased potential evapotranspiration,
and permafrost warming. Research from the Seward Peninsula and Kenai Peninsula has demonstrated a substantial landscape-level
trend in the reduction of surface water and number of closed-basin ponds. We investigated whether this drying trend occurred
at nine other regions throughout Alaska. One study region was from the Arctic Coastal Plain where deep permafrost occurs continuously
across the landscape. The other eight study regions were from the boreal forest regions where discontinuous permafrost occurs.
Mean annual precipitation across the study regions ranged from 100 to over 700 mm yr−1. We used remotely sensed imagery from the 1950s to 2002 to inventory over 10,000 closed-basin ponds from at least three periods
from this time span. We found a reduction in the area and number of shallow, closed-basin ponds for all boreal regions. In
contrast, the Arctic Coastal Plain region had negligible change in the area of closed-basin ponds. Since the 1950s, surface
water area of closed-basin ponds included in this analysis decreased by 31 to 4 percent, and the total number of closed-basin
ponds surveyed within each study region decreased from 54 to 5 percent. There was a significant increasing trend in annual
mean temperature and potential evapotranspiration since the 1950s for all study regions. There was no significant trend in
annual precipitation during the same period. The regional trend of shrinking ponds may be due to increased drainage as permafrost
warms, or increased evapotranspiration during a warmer and extended growing season.
Received 5
December
2005;
accepted 20
June
2006;
published 10
October
2006.
Keywords: remote sensing;
ponds;
boreal regions.
Index Terms: 1640 Global Change: Remote sensing (1855); 1632 Global Change: Land cover change; 1804 Hydrology: Catchment; 1818 Hydrology: Evapotranspiration.
Read Full Article (file size: 3193355 bytes) Cited by
Citation: Riordan, B., D. Verbyla, and A. D. McGuire
(2006),
Shrinking ponds in subarctic Alaska based on 1950–2002 remotely sensed images,
J. Geophys. Res.,
111,
G04002,
doi:10.1029/2005JG000150.
Copyright 2006 by the American Geophysical Union.
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