Friday, July 31, 2015
Dry, dry, dry: High Haleakala increasingly arid
Summers high on Haleakala
have been getting steadily drier for the past 25 years, according to detailed quarter-century study of the weather on Maui’s dominant mountain.
And that’s just one of the
notable trends in the climate of the mountain.
And it is another indicator
that Hawai`i can expect a drier future: that natural environments and human
water availability will be significantly impacted over time. More on other
research in this area below.
The complex study notes that
Haleakala has multiple micro-environments: “ecosystems can range from desert,
to tropical rainforest, to alpine shrubland over very short distances.”
A key feature of Hawaiian
high mountain rainfall patterns is the tradewind inversion. Tradewinds blow
across the Pacific, and are driven upward as they hit Island slopes. The
rising, cooling air tends to promote rainfall. The paper describes it this way;
“On the windward side of the island, trade winds push moist air up the eastern
slopes of the mountain, cooling air to the dew point, causing water vapor to
condense, forming clouds.”
But this pattern is blocked
by the tradewind inversion, a layer of dry, clear and generally warmer air. On
Hawaiian high peaks, you can often look down through clear air to the tradewind
inversion layer, where the clouds are. The bottom of the inversion layer is the
top of the cloud layer.
One result is that there is
often far less rainfall on the highest slopes, which are protected from
tradewind showers by the inversion layer. They tend to be virtual deserts
compared to the rainforests on the middle slopes.
The researchers found that
weather has been changing, and specifically, “a significant drying trend is apparent
at all of the stations located above 1000 m,” or about 3,300 feet. And that is
likely the result of a much more frequent tradewind inversion presence, they
say.
To get this data, a team of
researchers established 11 climate monitoring stations high on the slopes of
the volcanic mountain starting in June 1988. The complex stations collected “solar
radiation, net radiation, relative humidity, wind speed, temperature, precipitation
and soil moisture, and derived variables including potential evapotranspiration,
vapor pressure deficit, soil heat flux and daytime cloud attenuation of
sunlight.”
The new report, “Climatology of Haleakala” was prepared by Ryan J. Longman, Thomas W. Giambelluca and Michael
A. Nullet, all of the University of Hawai`i Geography Department, and Lloyd
Loope, retired researcher with the USGS Pacific Island Ecosystems Research
Center. It is Technical Report 193 of
the UH Pacific Cooperative Studies Unit.
“The goal of this report is
to bring awareness of the climate diversity that exists along the slopes of
Haleakalā Volcano and to the changes that are occurring there,” the authors
write.
One of their messages: “Changes
in moisture may affect vegetation characteristics, promote the spread of invasive
species, and decrease water recharge to the aquifers. These changes are amplified by the time scales
by which they are occurring. The faster the climate changes, the less time
native species will have to react to these changes and the area in which these
species have a competitive advantage may shrink.”
There’s a lot more in this
study, and if you’re interested, click on the link above. The full paper is available
free online.
The suggestion that rainfall
is dropping over time isn’t new. This report is just another brick in that
wall.
Earlier this year, Pao-Shin
Chu of the University of Hawai`i’s Department of Meteorology published a studyin the International Journal of Climatology, which linked winter drought to El
Nino events.
Tim Hurley’s story on the
study in the Honolulu Star-Advertiser quoted Chu as saying, “"The planet
is changing. You should not assume the weather will remain steady as before.
You need to revolutionize your thinking."
A 2014 report, “Climate ChangeImpacts in Hawai`i,” also sees reduced rainfall.
It is a dense report, readily
available online, that includes recitations of many of the impacts of climate
change. With regard to water, there is
some spooky stuff.
“Streamflow records also show
a decline in base flow over the last century by 20-70%, depending on the
watershed, suggesting a decrease in groundwater level,” it says.
“Hawai‘i has experienced
longer droughts in recent years, as all the populated islands show an
increasing trend in length of dry periods during 1980-2011, as compared
with1950 -1970.”
And the tradewinds, which
drive a lot of our rainfall? “Prevailing northeasterly trade winds, which drive
orographic precipitation on windward coasts, have decreased in frequency since
1973 in Hawai‘i.”
Still, there’s a lot of
uncertainty. Some models suggest O`ahu and Kaua`i Counties should get drier and
that Maui and the Big Island should get a little more rain due to climate
change. (Although the Haleakala study cited above doesn't show that.) Other models suggest drier winters but slightly wetter summers
statewide.
But so far, dry tends to be
the trend.
© Jan TenBruggencate 2015
Posted by Jan T at 11:09 AM 0 comments
Labels: Agriculture, Botany, Climate Change, Geology, Government, Volcanoes, Weather, Wind
Tuesday, July 14, 2015
Sea level will rise 20 feet--but when?
The most recent reviews of climate change and sea levels lead
to important conclusions—sea levels will rise more than we’ve understood, certainly
dramatically, even catastrophically…
The threat that emerges from the new research is so immense, so scary,
that you’re not seeing it covered in most serious media. Partly, perhaps that's because it seems to outlandish, but also it is because
there is still so much uncertainty in the timing.
The likelihood, according to a new study, is of sea levels 20 feet
higher than they are now. It has happened before. Indeed, for those of us who have walked the limestone of the ancient coral reefs of Ewa, it's no surprise that sea levels have been far higher than they are now.
The report says those high ocean levels are pretty much baked-in
by current greenhouse gas levels and anticipated warming. It’s just not clear
when. Could be decades, but it could be centuries. A lot of smart people are trying to figure out which.
“We're debating about timescales that are orders of
magnitude different--decades, centuries, a thousand years,” said Andrea Dutton,
the new paper’s lead author and a University of Florida carbonate geochemist.
First, some background.
The International Panel on Climate Change in 2007 figured
sea levels could be up .2 to .6 meters--almost two feet--by 2100. That would be
problematic for low places in the Islands, but perhaps not catastrophic in most
places.
But then the potential impacts of the melting Greenland and
Antarctica ice sheets were figured in, and the numbers increased to 1-2 meters,
or 3 to six feet by 2100.
During storm periods and super tides, that puts a lot of the
coastal areas underwater—badly underwater—including in the Hawaiian Islands.
Other researchers confirm the suggestion of sea level rise of
at least 3 feet.
This report, published this week in the journal Climate
Research by researchers from Denmark, China, Holland and England, comes up with
sea level estimates for every major coastal city in Northern Europe. Depending
on where you are, and how the land itself moves, the number could be close to 3
feet by 2100, they say.
But they add an ominous warning: “There is a considerable
risk that relative sea level rise will exceed recent high-end scenarios.”
And they also warn not to put too much focus on the 2100
level, because planning for that won’t be planning enough: “Sea level rise will
continue for centuries beyond 2100, and sea level rise over the 22nd century is
projected to exceed that of the 21st century. This long-term aspect should be
considered in adaptation plans.”
But another new report, published last week in the journal Science, has thrown all that onto the back burner.
Based on detailed study of coastal changes in ancient sea
level as a result of the warming-caused melting of the globe’s great ice sheets, the authors say there is an excellent chance that even very small amounts of warming—just 1 to 2
degrees—could raise sea levels six meters.
That’s up to 20
feet above current levels. That is catastrophic by any standard for coastal
communities.
Dutton and her colleagues calculated that the
amount of water lost from the immense ice sheets of Greenland and
Antarctica is expected in time to be the major contributor to sea level
rise. To try to assess their impact, they studied previous
interglacial periods when temperatures were higher than current levels.
Their finding:
"During recent interglacial periods, small increases in global mean
temperature and just a few degrees of
polar warming relative to the preindustrial
period resulted in" as much as 20 feet or more of sea level rise."
And they assess that these levels are probable, because
similar temperatures have caused similar sea heights repeatedly in the past.
RaisingIslands contacted lead author Andrea Dutton at the University of Florida. She said
the sea level rise is probably coming, but the researchers still can’t tell how
quickly it will arrive. That’s what they’re working on next.
“As we state in the paper, perhaps the most societally
relevant information we can provide from the record of past sea-level rise is
the rate at which sea level rose as the polar ice sheets retreated. At this
stage, the data we have on rates is still highly uncertain and hence is an
important target for future research.
“The physics in the models is not good enough to make
projections of rapid ice sheet retreat and/or collapse…There is no consensus on
how long it will take.
"In general, multi-meter sea level rise is thought to
take at least centuries, though a model published earlier this year suggested
it could be possible over several decades.
So we're debating about timescales that are orders of magnitude different--decades,
centuries, a thousand years. Hence the
answer is that it is too uncertain to say,” Dutton said in an email.
What does that mean for people living in coastal areas, and
those responsible for planning?
“From a planning perspective, it would seem to make sense to
want to plan for a rate of sea-level rise that is higher than most projections
since major storm events will cause extreme sea levels that are even higher
than the background rate of rising sea levels,” Dutton said in her email.
Because the impacts of sea levels more than two stories high
are so severe the development of better data of global mean sea level (GMSL) is critical, Dutton and her co-authors wrote.
“Improving our understanding of rates of GMSL rise due to
polar ice-mass loss is perhaps the most societally relevant information the
paleorecord can provide, yet robust estimates of rates of GMSL rise associated
with polar ice-sheet retreat and/or collapse remain a weakness in existing
sea-level reconstructions,” they wrote.
How does a community plan for something like this? In Hawai`i, consider that at the predicted levels, most of our airports are underwater, most of our harbors are gone, most of our resort areas are awash, many of our water wells turn salty. Sewer lines, power plants, coastal roads are destroyed, and many communities on almost every island are isolated.
Most of the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands and most of the atolls and other low-lying islands throughout the Pacific would be gone. The impacts on the turtles, seals and millions of nesting seabirds are beyond imagining.
© Jan TenBruggencate 2015
Posted by Jan T at 3:58 PM 1 comments
Labels: Archaeology, Climate Change, Geology, Marine Issues, Oceanography, Physics, technology, Weather
Monday, July 13, 2015
Collapsing seabird populations--down 70% in 60 years.
Seabird populations have dropped by two-thirds in the past
60 years, and may have dropped significantly even before that.
Recent studies suggest that the winged wonders that soar
over the oceans are dramatically fewer than they were long ago.
(Image: Albatross numbers are down. Credit: NOAA.)
(Image: Albatross numbers are down. Credit: NOAA.)
Many of the seabirds around the Hawaiian Islands lay their
eggs and raise their young on the islands.
Some islands, notably the ones in
the Northwestern Hawaiian Island archipelago, are still dense with nesting
birds. Around the Main Hawaiian Islands, not so much.
But they once were nesting in massive colonies here, as
well, said Storrs Olson, the famed paleoornithologist at Smithsonian
Institution. Olson said bird flocks flying out to sea from those colonies would have been
so dense that any early voyagers would have easily found the Hawaiian Islands
if they’d gotten within a few hundred miles.
But most of those Main Hawaiian Island colonies have been lost to habitat
destruction and predation.
In modern times, the decline in bird populations continues.
Researchers from the University of British Columbia reported
that during the last 60 years, monitored populations of seabirds have declined
70 percent. Their work was published in the journal PLOS One. Here is Eurekalert’s printing of the university’s press release. Here's Science Daily's version.
They didn’t look at all seabirds—not all seabirds are being
monitored--but their work represented studies of 500 populations worldwide, which
represent 19 percent of all seabirds.
Lead author Michelle Paleczny, a UBC
master's student and researcher with the Sea Around Us project, said overall
populations had dropped 69.6 per cent in
the 60-year period from 1950 to 2010, equivalent to a loss of about 230 million
birds.
“The largest declines were observed in families containing
wide-ranging pelagic species, suggesting that pan-global populations may be
more at risk than shorter-ranging coastal populations,” the authors wrote.
Those pan-pelagic species would include birds like albatrosses.
We are losing the birds to a variety of threats. The authors
cite entanglement in fishing gear, overfishing of food sources, climate change,
pollution, disturbance, direct exploitation, development, energy production,
and introduced species like cats, dogs and other predators on nesting sites
that once lacked these predators.
These are familiar stories in Hawai`i, where
we regularly see stories of nesting seabirds like shearwaters, albatross and
petrels being attacked on their nests by pigs, rats, cats and dogs.
The health of seabird populations is important because, as
wide-ranging species, they can open a window to the health of the oceans.
“Seabird population changes are good indicators of long-term
and large-scale change in marine ecosystems because seabird populations are
relatively well-monitored, their ecology allows them to integrate long-term and
large-scale signals (they are long-lived, wide-ranging and forage at high
trophic levels), and their populations are strongly influenced by
threats to marine and coastal ecosystems,” the authors wrote.
© Jan TenBruggencate 2015
Citation: Michelle Paleczny, Edd Hammill, Vasiliki Karpouzi,
Daniel Pauly. Population Trend of the World’s Monitored Seabirds, 1950-2010.
PLOS ONE, 2015; 10 (6): e0129342 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0129342
Posted by Jan T at 10:02 AM 0 comments
Labels: Archaeology, Birds, Climate Change, Conservation, Fisheries, Marine Issues, Oceanography, Pesticides, Pollution, Zoology
Wednesday, July 1, 2015
The Maui GM Ordinance preemption ruling: A deeper look.
There are lots of fascinating tidbits in federal Distric Judge
Susan Oki Mollway’s rejection of the Maui GMO ordinance.
And lots of things left undecided—things to give hope to
both sides in the dispute. More on that later.
The essence of Mollway’s ruling was that Maui County can’t
enforce the GMO ban, because it would intrude on the authority of both the federal
and state governments, and that its civil fine provisions are clear violations
of the county’s authority.
The judge refers to the federal Plant Protection Act, which
prohibits bringing across state lines genetically modified plants that have
been developed using known weeds. If genetically modified plants aren’t weeds,
they are permitted, the act says.
Since the Maui ordinance prohibits all GM plants, it
prohibits ones that are permitted under federal law.
“If the ordinance conflicts with (the Plant Protection Act)
then the ordinance’s conflicting provisions are preempted…,” the judge wrote. “Maui’s ban of GE organisms run afoul of the
Plant Protection Act and its regulations,” she wrote.
She goes on to say that the Maui ban violates the Plant
Protection Act’s “purpose of setting a national standard governing the movement
of plant pests and noxious weeds in interstate commerce based on sound science.”
On the issue state preemption,
the judge said the state Constitution clearly delegates to the state
Legislature the authority to protect agricultural lands, and that the state
Legislature clearly delegates to the state Department of Agriculture “authority
to oversee the introduction, propagation, inspection, destruction and control
of plants.”
The opponents of the Maui bill argue that the Department of
Agriculture has a clear and thorough regulatory system in place that preempts
the Maui bill. The supporters of the Maui bill say it’s a mere “patchwork” of
regulations. Mollway seemed satisfied that the state’s regulatory system is
sufficient to prevent the county from stepping in.
On a third major point, Judge Mollway said the fines imposed under the Maui bill violate both
the county Charter and state law--largely because the fines are way too high. “The civil fine provisions are unenforceable,”
the judge wrote.
While the Maui GMO ban is clearly defeated, Judge Mollway
left intriguing hints about possible additional arguments for both sides—arguments
she said she didn’t need to address since the preemption and illegal fine issues were clear enough.
Supporters of the ban have cheered her insistence that her
ruling is entirely on legal grounds, not on the inherent value or danger of
genetic modification of food plants. “No portion of this ruling says anything
about whether GE organisms are good or bad or about whether the court thinks
the substance of the Ordinance would be beneficial to the county.”
Does this mean Mollway might have an opinion about whether GE organisms ought to be controlled? No clue. She's not saying.
The other side can draw strength from the fact that there
were several arguments favorable to the seed industry that Mollway didn’t feel she
needed to research.
Mollway said she did not even need to look into whether the
EPA’s experimental use permits, which have been issued to Monsanto, also preempt
the Maui bill.
She said she didn’t need to get into whether state pesticide
laws also preempt the ordinance.
And she said she didn’t need to determine
whether the Commerce Clause of the U.S. Constutition preempts the ordinance.
In a little dig at the anti-GM folks, Mollway criticized a
tendency to assert things without bothering to back them up. The court ruled
that you can’t refute a stated fact without evidence—meaning you can’t simply
say it isn’t true. You need to show it isn’t true.
In one case, the GM opponents—the group calling itself SHAKA—even
denied that Maui County is a political subdivision of the state. Mollway chided
the group for violating court rules by “generally denying the facts without
citation of any evidence and by including immaterial additional facts.”
On the same issue, Joan Conrow has an excellent article at her blog site. It looks at the issues from a slightly different perspective. Find it here.
On the same issue, Joan Conrow has an excellent article at her blog site. It looks at the issues from a slightly different perspective. Find it here.
© Jan TenBruggencate 2015
Posted by Jan T at 10:33 AM 0 comments
Labels: Agriculture, Botany, Genetic engineering, Government, Pesticides, Pollution, Sustainability, technology
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