FLASH FLOODS HIT ARCTIC PARK


Environmental Panorama
International
August of 2008


05 Aug 2008 - A national park in Canada's Arctic known as The Land That Never Melts has been partly closed after record high temperatures caused flash flooding, the BBC has reported.

Hiking trails were washed away and 22 visitors had to be evacuated by helicopter from the Auyuittuq National Park on Baffin Island in Nunavut.

A combination of melting permafrost and erosion means part of the park will remain shut until geologists can examine the damage.

The park consists mainly of glaciers, rock and polar sea ice.

The Auyuittuq - which means The Land that Never Melts - covers an area of over 19,000sq km (7,340sq miles) and is dominated by the huge Penny Ice Cap.

It is popular with hikers, climbers and skiers.

Ancient trail

Pauline Scott, a spokeswoman for Parks Canada, told the BBC News website that after two weeks of record-breaking hot weather in June the ice had "melted at a phenomenal rate - we've never seen this kind of phenomenon in almost 40 years since the park was first opened".

Speaking from Iqaluit, the capital of the Canadian Arctic territory of Nunavut, Ms Scott said that due to the massive amount of melting ice "huge portions of what was formerly a 60km trail in the park have completely gone".

Most visitors enter the park via the Akshayuk Pass, a traditional travel corridor used by the Inuit for thousands of years.

Now the pass has been closed as the glacier moraine that blocks Crater Lake from spilling into the pass is severely eroded, Ms Scott says, and threatens to create a flash flood.

The federal parks department has asked glaciologists and geologists for advice on whether it is safe to reopen the pass.

Ms Scott says the ground in the park is now very unstable and cracks are appearing along the trail.

She says it is thought that the melting ice is linked to climate change, as temperatures in parts of the Arctic have risen far faster than the global average in recent decades.

+ More

Indigenous training offers hope of cutting poaching in Primorye

07 Aug 2008 - An indigenous people famed for helping early Siberian explorers survive in the wild are now passing on their knowledge to the guardians of one of the world’s most porous borders.

Leading the training effort in north east Russia is Vasilii Dunkai, leader of the scouting school in Krasnyi Yar in northern Primorye.

The scouting school was originally conceived to teach school children survival skills and pass on ancestral knowledge but the latest batch of students includeds Russian border patrol forces.

Dunkai, who was joined by Pavel Fomenko, WWF biodiversity conservation coordinator in the region, specifically sought to explain how to minimise conflicts between humans and wildlife, such as tigers and leopards native to the region, and to identify signs of human and animal activity.

It is a role recalling the most celebrated of the Nanai people, Dersu Uzala, the hunter who passed into Russian folkore teaching the explorer Russian explorer Vladimir Arsenyev how to survive Siberia in the early 20th Century.

“All of southwestern Primorye is monitored by the border forces, making them responsible for the protection of rare breeds of species such as the Amur leopard,” explains Pavel Fomenko, WWF biodiversity conservation coordinator for the region.

“I hope that the lessons learnt by the soldiers will help to protect Russia’s valuable biological resources.”

The border patrol plays a key role in seizing and preventing the delivery of valuable animal parts, such as tiger bones used for traditional medicine, across the border into China.

“Monitoring this border region, which stretches for 300 kilometres, is an extremely difficult task,” said Fomenko.

“Annually, thousands of snares are removed, and hundreds of Chinese poachers are detained,” he added.

 
 

Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International
Press consultantship
All rights reserved

 
 
 
 

 

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