arctic glacier
Recently Published Documents


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

125
(FIVE YEARS 11)

H-INDEX

32
(FIVE YEARS 1)

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 154-160
Author(s):  
Andreas Alexander

Glacier cave visits are an important tourism activity on Svalbard with increasing popularity. This study investigates the thermal effect of touristic visits on the air temperature of a glacier cave on Longyearbreen, a small high-Arctic glacier. Short-term temperature perturbations of up to 1.59°C (42% local temperature increase) can be linked to human visitors. It is, however, unlikely that the local heat input from touristic visits is high enough to cause a lasting effect on the thermal regime of glacier caves and the surrounding ice.


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (10) ◽  
pp. 1978
Author(s):  
Éric Bernard ◽  
Jean-Michel Friedt ◽  
Madeleine Griselin

The global climate shift currently underway has significant impacts on both the quality and quantity of snow precipitation. This directly influences the spatial variability of the snowpack as well as cumulative snow height. Contemporary glacier retreat reorganizes periglacial morphology: while the glacier area decreases, the moraine area increases. The latter is becoming a new water storage potential that is almost as important as the glacier itself, but with considerably more complex topography. Hence, this work fills one of the missing variables of the hydrological budget equation of an arctic glacier basin by providing an estimate of the snow water equivalent (SWE) of the moraine contribution. Such a result is achieved by investigating Structure from Motion (SfM) image processing that is applied to pictures collected from an Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) as a method for producing snow depth maps over the proglacial moraine area. Several UAV campaigns were carried out on a small glacial basin in Spitsbergen (Arctic): the measurements were made at the maximum snow accumulation season (late April), while the reference topography maps were acquired at the end of the hydrological year (late September) when the moraine is mostly free of snow. The snow depth is determined from Digital Surface Model (DSM) subtraction. Utilizing dedicated and natural ground control points for relative positioning of the DSMs, the relative DSM georeferencing with sub-meter accuracy removes the main source of uncertainty when assessing snow depth. For areas where snow is deposited on bare rock surfaces, the correlation between avalanche probe in-situ snow depth measurements and DSM differences is excellent. Differences in ice covered areas between the two measurement techniques are attributed to the different quantities measured: while the former only measures snow accumulation, the latter includes all of the ice accumulation during winter through which the probe cannot penetrate, in addition to the snow cover. When such inconsistencies are observed, icing thicknesses are the source of the discrepancy that is observed between avalanche probe snow cover depth measurements and differences of DSMs.


Polar Science ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 100661
Author(s):  
Purnima Singh ◽  
Sakae Tsuda ◽  
Shiv Mohan Singh ◽  
Sukanta Mondal ◽  
Utpal Roy

mBio ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yonghui Zeng ◽  
Xihan Chen ◽  
Anne Mette Madsen ◽  
Athanasios Zervas ◽  
Tue Kjærgaard Nielsen ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Conserving additional energy from sunlight through bacteriochlorophyll (BChl)-based reaction center or proton-pumping rhodopsin is a highly successful life strategy in environmental bacteria. BChl and rhodopsin-based systems display contrasting characteristics in the size of coding operon, cost of biosynthesis, ease of expression control, and efficiency of energy production. This raises an intriguing question of whether a single bacterium has evolved the ability to perform these two types of phototrophy complementarily according to energy needs and environmental conditions. Here, we report four Tardiphaga sp. strains (Alphaproteobacteria) of monophyletic origin isolated from a high Arctic glacier in northeast Greenland (81.566° N, 16.363° W) that are at different evolutionary stages concerning phototrophy. Their >99.8% identical genomes contain footprints of horizontal operon transfer (HOT) of the complete gene clusters encoding BChl- and xanthorhodopsin (XR)-based dual phototrophy. Two strains possess only a complete XR operon, while the other two strains have both a photosynthesis gene cluster and an XR operon in their genomes. All XR operons are heavily surrounded by mobile genetic elements and are located close to a tRNA gene, strongly signaling that a HOT event of the XR operon has occurred recently. Mining public genome databases and our high Arctic glacial and soil metagenomes revealed that phylogenetically diverse bacteria have the metabolic potential of performing BChl- and rhodopsin-based dual phototrophy. Our data provide new insights on how bacteria cope with the harsh and energy-deficient environment in surface glacier, possibly by maximizing the capability of exploiting solar energy. IMPORTANCE Over the course of evolution for billions of years, bacteria that are capable of light-driven energy production have occupied every corner of surface Earth where sunlight can reach. Only two general biological systems have evolved in bacteria to be capable of net energy conservation via light harvesting: one is based on the pigment of (bacterio-)chlorophyll and the other is based on proton-pumping rhodopsin. There is emerging genomic evidence that these two rather different systems can coexist in a single bacterium to take advantage of their contrasting characteristics in the number of genes involved, biosynthesis cost, ease of expression control, and efficiency of energy production and thus enhance the capability of exploiting solar energy. Our data provide the first clear-cut evidence that such dual phototrophy potentially exists in glacial bacteria. Further public genome mining suggests this understudied dual phototrophic mechanism is possibly more common than our data alone suggested.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yonghui Zeng ◽  
Xihan Chen ◽  
Anne Mette Madsen ◽  
Athanasios Zervas ◽  
Tue Kjærgaard Nielsen ◽  
...  

AbstractConserving additional energy from sunlight through bacteriochlorophyll (BChl)‐based reaction center or proton‐pumping rhodopsin is a highly successful life strategy in environmental bacteria. Rhodopsin and BChl based systems display contrasting characteristics in the size of coding operon, cost of biosynthesis, ease of expression control, and efficiency of energy production. This raises an intriguing question of whether a single bacterium has evolved the ability to perform these two types of phototrophy complementarily according to energy needs and environmental conditions. Here we report four Tardiphaga sp. strains (Alphaproteobacteria) of monophyletic origin isolated from a high Arctic glacier in northeast Greenland (81.566° N, 16.363° W) that are at different evolutionary stages concerning phototrophy. Their >99.8% identical genomes contain footprints of horizontal operon transfers (HOT) of the complete gene clusters encoding BChl and xanthorhodopsin (XR)‐based dual phototrophy. Two strains only possess a complete xanthorhodopsin (XR) operon, while the other two strains have both a photosynthesis gene cluster (PGC) and an XR operon in their genomes. All XR operons are heavily surrounded by mobile genetic elements and located close to a tRNA gene, strongly signaling that a HOT event of XR operon has occurred recently. Mining public genome databases and our High Arctic glacial and soil metagenomes revealed that phylogenetically diverse bacteria have the metabolic potential of performing BChl and rhodopsin‐based dual phototrophy. Our data provide new insights on how bacteria cope with the harsh and energy‐deficient environments in surface glaciers, possibly by maximizing the capability of exploiting solar energy.ImportanceOver billions of years of evolution, bacteria capable of light‐driven energy production have occupied every corner of surface Earth where solar irradiation can reach. Only two general biological systems have evolved in bacteria to be capable of net energy conservation via light‐harvesting: one is based on the pigment of (bacterio‐)chlorophyll and the other based on light‐sensing retinal molecules. There is emerging genomic evidence that these two rather different systems can co‐exist in a single bacterium to take advantage of their contrasting characteristics in the number of genes involved, biosynthesis cost, ease of expression control and efficiency of energy production, and thus enhance the capability of exploiting solar energy. Our data provide the first clear‐cut evidence that such dual phototrophy potentially exist in glacial bacteria. Further public genome mining suggests this understudied dual phototrophic mechanism is possibly more common than our data alone suggested.Sequence data availabilityGenomes, metagenomes and raw reads were deposited into GenBank under Bioprojects PRJNA548505 and PRJNA552582.


2020 ◽  
Vol 246 ◽  
pp. 111858 ◽  
Author(s):  
Scott N. Williamson ◽  
Luke Copland ◽  
Laura Thomson ◽  
David Burgess

2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (12) ◽  
pp. 7243-7258 ◽  
Author(s):  
Moya L. Macdonald ◽  
Jemma L. Wadham ◽  
Dickon Young ◽  
Chris R. Lunder ◽  
Ove Hermansen ◽  
...  

Abstract. The Arctic is one of the most rapidly warming regions of the Earth, with predicted temperature increases of 5–7 ∘C and the accompanying extensive retreat of Arctic glacial systems by 2100. Retreating glaciers will reveal new land surfaces for microbial colonisation, ultimately succeeding to tundra over decades to centuries. An unexplored dimension to these changes is the impact upon the emission and consumption of halogenated organic compounds (halocarbons). Halocarbons are involved in several important atmospheric processes, including ozone destruction, and despite considerable research, uncertainties remain in the natural cycles of some of these compounds. Using flux chambers, we measured halocarbon fluxes across the glacier forefield (the area between the present-day position of a glacier's ice-front and that at the last glacial maximum) of a high-Arctic glacier in Svalbard, spanning recently exposed sediments (<10 years) to approximately 1950-year-old tundra. Forefield land surfaces were found to consume methyl chloride (CH3Cl) and methyl bromide (CH3Br), with both consumption and emission of methyl iodide (CH3I) observed. Bromoform (CHBr3) and dibromomethane (CH2Br2) have rarely been measured from terrestrial sources but were here found to be emitted across the forefield. Novel measurements conducted on terrestrial cyanobacterial mats covering relatively young surfaces showed similar measured fluxes to the oldest, vegetated tundra sites for CH3Cl, CH3Br, and CH3I (which were consumed) and for CHCl3 and CHBr3 (which were emitted). Consumption rates of CH3Cl and CH3Br and emission rates of CHCl3 from tundra and cyanobacterial mat sites were within the ranges reported from older and more established Arctic tundra elsewhere. Rough calculations showed total emissions and consumptions of these gases across the Arctic were small relative to other sources and sinks due to the small surface area represented by glacier forefields. We have demonstrated that glacier forefields can consume and emit halocarbons despite their young age and low soil development, particularly when cyanobacterial mats are present.


2020 ◽  
Vol 66 (256) ◽  
pp. 278-290
Author(s):  
Lena U. Hansen ◽  
Jan A. Piotrowski ◽  
Douglas I. Benn ◽  
Heidi Sevestre

AbstractRecent speleological surveys of meltwater drainage systems in cold and polythermal glaciers have documented dynamic englacial and in some cases subglacial conduits formed by the ‘cut-and-closure’ mechanism. Investigations of the spatial distribution of such conduits often require a combination of different methods. Here, we studied the englacial drainage system in the cold glacier Longyearbreen, Svalbard by combining speleological exploration of a 478 m long meltwater conduit with a high-resolution ground penetrating radar (GPR) survey with two different centre-frequencies (25 and 100 MHz). The results yielded a 3-D documentation of the present englacial drainage system. The study shows that the overall form of englacial conduits can be detected from velocity−depth converted GPR data, and that the 3-D model can facilitate a method to pinpoint the reflections in a radargram corresponding with the englacial drainage system, although fine detail cannot be resolved. Visible reflections approximately parallel to the mapped englacial water drainage system likely result from sediment incorporated in the ice or from abandoned parts of the englacial drainage system.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document