Long-term records track climate change effects on 91Ƶ’s North Slope
December 14, 2022
Haley Dunleavy
907-474-6407
 
                           
                           Toolik Field Station staff member Mayra Melendez Gonzalez drills into the ice on Toolik Lake to measure its thickness for long-term records in June 2022.
For 15 years, staff at the University of 91Ƶ Fairbanks Toolik Field Station, located
                           north of the Brooks Range, have kept a close eye on the tundra’s daily activity. They
                           record everything from lake ice thickness and precipitation to the date when each
                           year’s first blueberry ripens. It’s a practice that’s left Amanda Young, a co-principal
                           investigator for Toolik, questioning what “normal” means in a rapidly changing Arctic,
                           especially when temperatures unseasonably rose above freezing earlier this month.
 
These consistent records of daily to weekly environmental variation may seem mundane,
                           but, together, they tell a story about the changing tundra that large-scale models
                           and one-time sampling campaigns miss. By having this long-term record of change, Young
                           said in a poster she’s presenting at the American Geophysical Union’s 2022 fall meeting,
                           “visiting researchers can get a better idea of where their shorter-term projects fall
                           into the larger picture and avoid misinterpreting their findings.”
 
Often, the data will show connections between seemingly disparate variables, said
                           Young. For example, an abnormally large snowstorm in May 2015 might be the reason
                           savannah sparrow and Lapland longspur populations noticeably dropped in 2016.
 
Young said the biggest trend occurred in deep permafrost soils, where temperatures
                           are warming, a concerning early indicator of permafrost thaw.
 
“These are the things people have been measuring for ages,” Young said. “They’re useful
                           for science because they show how the plants, animals, microbes and everything else
                           are responding in the landscape. But these parameters also influence how we live on
                           the landscape.”
 
These datasets are available to access and explore via the Environmental Data Center website.
ADDITIONAL CONTACTS: Amanda Young, ayoung55@alaska.edu, 907-474-6826
 
				
