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Unpredictability, Ice, and Fire: a climate conversation with Bob Hollister

January 01, 2020

Unpredictability, Ice, and Fire: a climate conversation with Bob Hollister

Unpredictability, Ice, and Fire—a climate conversation with Bob Hollister
By Monica Johnstone, PhD

Bob Hollister, professor of Biology, has been involved in a long-term project in the Arctic since 1995.  I caught up to him for a November 2008 article in CLAS Acts.  Curious about what the longitudinal data indicates, I sat down recently with Bob to discuss where we are now.

Bob does his research in association with ITEX.  As their website explains, “The International Tundra Experiment (ITEX) is a network of researchers examining the impacts of warming on tundra ecosystems.” It began in 1990 and was set up to monitor vegetation change due to climate change in a way analogous to researchers monitoring sea ice, glaciers, and air temperature.  All these years later, Bob is co-chair of the network.

“In 1990 climate change was settled science,” Bob muses, “and we were working on how to document it.”  They agreed on measurement protocols, tried to stay low tech and inexpensive, and set about the work.  For Bob this means going to the area near Barrow, Alaska every summer, usually with a number of GVSU students.  They compare plots of tundra vegetation with other plots of tundra vegetation that have been warmed slightly and study the changes.  They can make predictions about the control plots using the 30 years of data that has been accumulated.

They make use of drone footage and have satellite imagery that can precisely measure changes in how green or brown the Arctic is.  “It’s greener, and some places are browning,” Bob explains. 

“Alaska is a wetland and a desert,” Bob notes.  The Arctic is actually not a very high precipitation place.  There is ice and water around in large part due to how little it drains.  Permafrost is very hard, harder to drill through than concrete as Bob knows from experience.  That hardness tends to keep the peat-rich soils from draining.  There are ice layers in the peat known as lenses.  When temperatures rise and the lenses melt, there is drainage causing landscape collapse known as slumping.  “When you drain a lake or melt a glacier, it’s brown.”

“As the seasonal thaws get deeper, the ice melts and the surface drops.  It becomes a muddy mess.  We have dramatic pictures of slumping events.  The whole ground surface is lowering in the Barrow peninsula.  A few millimeters a year.”

The peat then decomposes due to a combination of less moisture and warmer temperatures.  “So it is a big deal that they are drier.”

I ask about the Arctic fires that were reported last summer. “The Arctic fires are a big deal.” Bob tells me that in lower temperature fires the vegetation burns; in higher temperature fires the peat burns—essentially losing the “soil” and releasing immense amounts of sequestered carbon.  His research is about measuring the subtle release of carbon and methane with warming and vegetation change, but contrasts that with the enormous release when the peat burns.

“Tundra is going from being a carbon sink, accumulating peat, to a source as the old stored peat metabolizes.  Alaska and Siberia are losing lots of ponds.  Warming amplifies it.  It gets drier.  Soils disappear.”

Lightning, once rare, is more common now and is the source of many Arctic fires.  While people with cigarettes are sometimes to blame, lightning seems to be the primary source of fires, and there are more storms now.

Bob is now the lead PI on the 5-year grant proposal for $4 million to be divided between GVSU, Florida International University, University of Texas at El Paso, and University of Alaska at Anchorage.  In addition to conducting research, Bob is involved in outreach to kids in the community in the Barrow area.  In fact, to reach that key audience he had to travel in April to talk with them because his usual summer research window is outside of their school year.

He has also given talks at the Grand Rapids Public Museum, participated in Super Science Saturdays and made visits to area schools, often when they found him on the Artic Ecology Program website.  He’d like to do even more outreach and has been active in the Climate Change Education Solutions Network.

“There are pretty major changes.  No one in Alaska doubts climate change.  Really few in the world doubt climate change. It’s weird.  Up in that area they know their economy is tied to oil but they don’t deny.  There it is easy to pinpoint changes.  Here changes are dismissed as other stuff.  But the changes in increased precipitation, higher lake levels, ice fishing conditions becoming no longer predictable—changes are happening here but up there it is more obvious.  Almost all of the predictions are on the very conservative side because scientists are not generally alarmist, work on the basis of consensus.  Exceedingly conservative.  We are seeing way more sea level rise.  Faster melting,” Bob observes.  “There is credible evidence that Greenland will not have ice at the 1,000 year scale.” 

Bob notes that like first responders, it is being suggested that environmental scientists need counselling to be part of their profession.  “But I’m more Star Trek than Blade Runner,” Bob quips to describe his outlook.  “The world is a better place in many respects,” Bob notes enumerating global fertility decline that will slow population increase, that hunger is not an issue to the degree it once was, that pollution in the US has made notable improvements.

“The unpredictability is the bigger issue.  Despite the ‘vortex’ week last year you really have to talk to the bait shop owner and snowmobile rental folks who know it was not a particularly cold Michigan winter.  Up in Alaska they can’t count on being able to use transportation over ice.  They have to go by plane and that is astronomically more expensive.”

“I try not to be political in order to be credible.  It’s immoral not to somehow get involved.”  Students can become involved in this research.  At the time we talked, Bob was actively recruiting student researchers.

I mention that I’ll be planting some trees in my yard and am taking into account changes that will influence my choice of species.  Bob tells me that sugar maple will be outside its climatic niche in Michigan by the end of the century, well within the life span of the trees I mean to plant.  I will think about this a great deal as I rake what only seems like an endless supply.  

To learn more about Bob Hollister's research, make sure to go to the Arctic Ecology Program (AEP) website for any/all  upcoming developments.

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Page last modified January 1, 2020