Bangkok Post

ARCTIC VOYAGE FINDS GLOBAL WARMING’S IMPACT ON ICE AND ANIMALS

As polar bears find their hunting grounds melting and high-paying tourists enjoy cruises in water that used to be unnavigabl­e, scientists warn of a bleak future

- By Frank Jordans

If parts of the planet are becoming like a furnace because of global warming, then the Arctic is best described as the world’s air-conditioni­ng unit. The frozen north plays a crucial role in cooling the rest of the planet while reflecting some of the sun’s heat back into space.

Yet for several decades, satellite pictures have shown a dramatic decline in Arctic sea ice that is already affecting the lives of humans and animals in the region, from Inuit communitie­s to polar bears. Experts predict that the impact of melting sea ice will be felt across the northern hemisphere, altering ocean currents and causing freak weather as far south as Florida or France.

“Things are changing in the Arctic, and that is changing things everywhere else,” said David Snider, the seasoned mariner responsibl­e for navigating the Finnish icebreaker MSV Nordica through the Northwest Passage last month.

Researcher­s on the trip sought a firsthand view of the effects of global warming already seen from space. Even the dates of the journey were a clue: The ship departed Vancouver in early July and arrived in Nuuk, Greenland, on July 29, the earliest transit ever of a region that isn’t usually navigable until later in the year.

As it made its way through the North Pacific — passing Chinese cargo ships, Alaskan fishing boats and the occasional far-off whale — members of the expedition soaked up the sun in anticipati­on of freezing weeks to come.

Twelve days after the ship had left Vancouver, the ice appeared out of nowhere. By the time Nordica reached Point Barrow, on Alaska’s northernmo­st tip, the sea was swarming with ice.

Mr Snider recalled that when he started guiding ships through Arctic waters more than 30 years ago, the ice pack in mid-July would have stretched 80 kilometres farther southwest. Back then, a ship also would have encountere­d much thicker, blueish ice that had survived several summer melts, becoming hard as concrete in the process, he said.

He likened this year’s ice to a sea of porridge with a few hard chunks — no match for the nimble 13,000-tonne Nordica.

Since the first orbital images were taken in 1979, Arctic sea ice coverage during the summer has dropped by an average of about 88,000 square kilometres each year — almost the surface area of Serbia. More recent data show that not only is its surface area shrinking but the ice that’s left is getting thinner too. Mr Snider said he has seen the ice cover reduced in both concentrat­ion and thickness.

The melting ice is one reason why modern ships have an easier time going through the Northwest Passage, 111 years after Norwegian adventurer Roald Amundsen achieved the first transit. Early explorers found themselves blinded by harsh sunlight reflecting off a desert of white, confused by mirages that give the illusion of giant ice cliffs all around, and thrown off course by the proximity of the North Pole distorting their compass readings.

Modern mariners can get daily satellite snapshots of the ice and precise GPS locations that help them dodge dangerous shallows. But technology can be fickle. After two weeks at sea the ship’s fragile internet connection went down for six days: no emails, no Google, no new satellite pictures to preview the route ahead.

The outdoor thermomete­r indicated a temperatur­e of 8C, but in the never-setting sun of an Arctic summer it felt more like 15C. Days blurred into nights. Distant smoke from Cape Bathurst signalled slowburnin­g shale fires, while giant white golf balls indicated the remains of Cold War radar stations.

At one point a row of shacks appeared on a hill. As the ship passed by Cambridge Bay — home to Canada’s High Arctic Research Station — a brief cellphone signal flickered to life, allowing one homesick sailor to make a tearful call to his family.

The Finnish crew, meanwhile, took solace in the creature comforts of home, such as the on-board sauna and reindeer roast on Saturdays.

Even in their bunks, those on board heard the constant churning of ice as the ship ploughed through the debris rolling beneath the hull, thundering like hail on a tin roof.

As the icebreaker entered Victoria Strait, deep inside the Northwest Passage, we looked for a shadow moving in the distance or a flash of pale yellow in the expanse of white that would signal the presence of the world’s largest land predator.

At last, a cry went out: “Nanuq, nanuq!” Maatiusi Manning, an Inuit sailor, had spotted what everyone on board was hoping to see — the first polar bear.

The huge predators are at the top of a food chain that’s being pummelled by global warming because of the immediate impact vanishing sea ice has on a range of animals and plants that depend on it.

“If we continue losing ice, we are going to lose species with it,” said Paula von Weller, a field biologist who was on the trip.

No Arctic creatures have become more associated with climate change than polar bears. The US Fish and Wildlife Service estimated in January that about 26,000 specimens remain in the wild. Population counts of polar bears are notoriousl­y difficult, and researcher­s are unsure how much their numbers have changed in recent years. But the Fish and Wildlife Service warned that melting sea ice is robbing the bear of its natural hunting ground for seals and other prey.

While some polar bears are expected to follow the retreating ice north, others will head south, where they will come into greater contact with humans — encounters that are unlikely to end well for the bears.

Still, being the poster child of Arctic wildlife may help the polar bear. Sightings are a highlight for adventure tourists who are flocking to Arctic cruises in increasing numbers.

Last year, the hottest on record in the Arctic, the Crystal Serenity took 1,100 high-paying guests on a cruise of the Northwest Passage, prompting environmen­talists to warn of an Arctic tourism rush that could disrupt wildlife habitats. Crystal Cruises says it works closely with local guides, marine biologists and conservati­onists to ensure wildlife isn’t harmed.

Ms von Weller said there are benefits to people seeing the region and its animals themselves.

“People are so far removed from the Arctic that they don’t understand it, they don’t know it and they don’t love it,” she said. “I think it’s important for people to see what’s here and to fall in love with it and have a bond and want to protect it.”

That love may need to extend further down the food chain if the fragile ecosystem in the Arctic continues to fall apart. Some of the animals highly associated with the ice are not going to be able to adapt in a reasonable amount of time to keep up with climate change, Ms von Weller said.

“The walrus, for example, may spend more time on the mainland. They are very prone to disturbanc­e, so that’s not a good place for walrus to be,” she said.

Research published four years ago rang alarms bells about the future of the red king crab — a big earner for Alaska’s fishing industry — because rising levels of carbon dioxide, a driver of global warming, are making oceans more acidic. Scientists found that juvenile crabs exposed to levels of acidificat­ion predicted for the future grew more slowly and were more likely to die.

Algae that cling to the underside of sea ice are also losing their habitat. If they vanish, the impact will be felt all the way up the food chain. Copepods, a type of zooplankto­n that eats algae, will lose their source of food. The tiny crustacean­s in turn are prey for fish, whales and birds.

Meanwhile, new rivals from the south are already arriving in the Arctic as waters warm. Orca have been observed travelling further north in search of food in recent years, and some wildlife experts predict they will become the main seal predator in the coming decades, replacing polar bears.

Humans are also increasing­ly venturing into the Arctic in search of untapped deposits of minerals and fossil fuels, posing a threat to animals.

Scientists believe there is no way to reverse the decline in Arctic sea ice in the foreseeabl­e future. Even in the best-case scenario envisaged by the 2015 Paris climate accord, sea ice will largely vanish from the Arctic during the summer within the coming decades.

In the end, the route that foiled countless explorers claimed little more than a camera and a drone. But we did get a taste of the warming Arctic: those heavy fur-lined boots never got used.

 ??  ?? WARMING UP: An iceberg floats past Bylot Island. The frozen north plays a crucial role in cooling the rest of the planet.
WARMING UP: An iceberg floats past Bylot Island. The frozen north plays a crucial role in cooling the rest of the planet.
 ??  ?? HUNGER SATED: A polar bear walks away after feasting on the carcass of a seal on the ice in the Franklin Strait.
HUNGER SATED: A polar bear walks away after feasting on the carcass of a seal on the ice in the Franklin Strait.
 ??  ?? RARE SIGHT: A humpback whale dives while swimming in the Nuup Kangerlua Fjord near Nuuk in southweste­rn Greenland.
RARE SIGHT: A humpback whale dives while swimming in the Nuup Kangerlua Fjord near Nuuk in southweste­rn Greenland.
 ??  ?? TIME FOR A BREAK: A seal sits on sea ice floating in the Victoria Strait in the Canadian Arctic Archipelag­o.
TIME FOR A BREAK: A seal sits on sea ice floating in the Victoria Strait in the Canadian Arctic Archipelag­o.
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? BROKEN ICE: Researcher­s look out from Finnish icebreaker ‘MSV Nordica’ as the sun sets over sea ice floating on the Victoria Strait along the Northwest Passage.
BROKEN ICE: Researcher­s look out from Finnish icebreaker ‘MSV Nordica’ as the sun sets over sea ice floating on the Victoria Strait along the Northwest Passage.
 ??  ?? DATA: Canadian ice navigator David Snider compares satellite images of ice coverage.
DATA: Canadian ice navigator David Snider compares satellite images of ice coverage.
 ??  ?? CLUED UP: Researcher Tiina Jaaskelain­en looks over informatio­n sheets on marine mammals.
CLUED UP: Researcher Tiina Jaaskelain­en looks over informatio­n sheets on marine mammals.

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