Academics

Ponds Are Slowly Disappearing In The Arctic

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Ponds are shrinking and slowly disappearing in the Arctic Tundra, according to a recent study.

Researchers at the University of Texas at El Paso analyzed more than 2,800 Arctic tundra ponds in the northern region of Alaska's Barrow Peninsula using historical photos and satellite images taken between 1948 and 2010. Over the 62-year period, they found that the number of ponds in the region had decreased by about 17 percent, while pond size had shrunk by an average of one-third.

"The 17 percent is a very conservative estimate because we didn't consider ponds that had divided, or split into two ponds," Christian Andresen, who led the study, said in a statement. "Some ponds are elongated and as they shrink over time, they can be divided into two or more smaller ponds."

Andresen and his colleagues point to warming temperatures and encroaching plants as one of the reasons the ponds are disappearing. As temperatures rise, nutrient-rich permafrost -- a frozen layer of soil -- thaws, releasing nutrients into ponds and enhancing plant growth.

"Plants are taking over shallow ponds because they're becoming warm and nutrient-rich," Andresen said. "Before you know it, boom, the pond is gone."

Andresen worries that the geomorphology of the region's landscape will change if these small bodies of water continue to shrink.

"The role of ponds in the arctic is extremely important," he said. "History tells us that ponds tend to enlarge over hundreds of years and eventually become lakes; ponds shape much of this landscape in the long run, and with no ponds there will be no lakes for this region."

Ponds in the Barrow Peninsula also serve as a major food source and nesting habitat for migratory birds, including certain waterfowl on the threatened species list, such as the spectacled eider (Somateria fischeri) and Steller's eider (Polysticta stelleri). If the aquatic system continues to shift toward a drier community, their vital summer feeding and nesting grounds could disappear, affecting the future of these and many other migratory species.

The findings are detailed in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences.

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