NERI IS TALKING OVER THE SCIENTIFIC COORDINATION OF THE MONITORING OF CLIMATE EFFECTS IN GREENLAND


Environmental Panorama
International
January of 2009


9 January 2009 - By Jens C Pedersen - With effect from 1 January 2009 the National Environmental Research Institute (NERI), Aarhus University is taking over the coordination of the climate change effects monitoring programs in Zackenberg in Northeast Greenland and in Nuuk in West Greenland from Danish Polar Centre under the Danish Agency for Science, Technology and Innovation. At the same occasion also the scientific management of the Zackenberg Research Station and the Polar Centre's Logistics Department is transferred to NERI. The restructuring of will strengthen the coordination of monitoring and research related to climate change effects in Greenland.

The monitoring programs will be carried out in collaboration between NERI, the University of Copenhagen and the Greenlandic research institutes, the Greenland Institute of Natural Resources and Asiaq. The programs are implemented with support from the Danish Ministry of Climate and Energy, the Danish Ministry of the Environment, the Danish Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation as well as the Greenland Home Rule. Further, NERI will in the future be advising the Danish Agency for Science, Technology and Innovation with regard to logistics issues in relating to research projects in Greenland.

Stronger collaboration

The Director of Research in Department of Arctic Environment at NERI Jesper Madsen sees good prospects in the new tasks:

'The perspective is that we achieve even closer coordination of the research on climate change effects in Greenland and in the Arctic as a whole. At the same time we are strengthening opportunities for national and not least international cooperation. Finally, we see a good potential in relation to collaboration with the forthcoming climate centre in Greenland'.

Two members of staff from the Danish Polar Centre, Scientific Coordinator Morten Rasch and Logistics Coordinator Jørgen Skafte have been transferred to NERI. Morten Rasch is responsible for the scientific management of the Zackenberg Research Station as well as the scientific coordination of the programs Nuuk Basic and Zackenberg Basic. Jørgen Skafte takes care of logistical advice and other logistical tasks around Zackenberg as well as in other remote Arctic areas - including especially northern Greenland and the Polar Sea. Additionally, a vacancy is currently posted at NERI for one more Logistics Coordinator to be functioning as Logistics Leader of Zackenberg Research Station.

Started from scratch

When anthropogenic climate change became the focus of public attention during the 1980s there was a group of researchers who took the initiative to establish a research station in Northeast Greenland's national park. The Danish Polar Centre took up the idea and made a research station to one of its main target areas. Zackenberg, close to the Sirius Dogsledge Patrol in Daneborg, was chosen as the best location and in 1995 researchers started the systematic collection of knowledge on nature and animal life in Northeast Greenland. With support from especially the Commission for Scientific Research in Greenland, the Danish Ministry of the Environment, Greenland Home Rule, University of Copenhagen, National Environmental Research Institute (NERI) and Asiaq the work has now been going on for more than ten years.

While nature and animal life have been followed for many years in the populated West Greenland, scientists knew very little about variations from year to year in nature and animal life in Northwest Greenland before the establishment of Zackenberg research Station.

They moreover were not familiar with the effects of the more long-term climate variations that have always taken place and in the future are expected to increase due to the human-induced climate change.

International attention

The number of researchers residing at the Zackenberg field station varies, but usually 30-40 researchers contribute to the research and monitoring during the course of a season.

Each year the scientists monitor more than 1,500 parameters in the High Arctic ecosystem, i.e. everything from discharge and sediment transport in rivers to the flowering of plants, egg laying periods of birds and calving of the musk ox. On top of this a wide range of more in-depth research projects are carried through.

Results of the first ten years' work have been published in the book, 'Changing Climate - Ten Years of Monitoring and Research at Zackenberg Research Station, Northeast Greenland', which has been published in English by Academic Press. Among the results, two pieces of work should be highlighted that have especially awoken international interest. One of the first results of the monitoring showed that spring in Zackenberg has advanced by up to one month during the last approximately ten years. This was published one year ago in the recognized journal Current Biology and the news circulated in the world's press. Another important result, just published, in Nature, is that the onset of the freeze in late autumn months squeezes enormous amounts of the greenhouse gas methane out of the tundra around Zackenberg.

Dissemination

NERI tells more about what goes on at Zackenberg in a leaflet which has published both in Danish and in Greenlandic. Here details are given of the most important results and about what can happen to the natural environment in the world's largest national park in response to the expected climate changes - which are considered likely to be especially severe in Northeast Greenland. The Greenlandic version of the leaflet has been distributed to all municipal offices, libraries, dentists and health centres in Greenland.

About Zackenberg

Northeast and North Greenland together with a large part of Greenland's icecap make up the world's largest national park, which is as good as free of all human habitation. The Zackenberg Research Station is situated centrally in Northeast Greenland and here one of the most comprehensive and cross-disciplinary research programs in the Arctic is coordinated by the National Environmental Research Institute, Aarhus University, with the cooperation of the University of Copenhagen and the Greenlandic research institutes, Asiaq and the Greenland Institute of Natural Resources.

The major part of the more than ten years' work at Zackenberg has been financed by the Danish Ministry of the Environment (until 2008), the Danish Climate and Energy Ministry, and the Danish Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation with important contributions from the Greenland Home Rule and the Aage V Jensen Charity Foundation.

Kobbefjord

Based on the success at Zackenberg, the partners involved decided to establish a corresponding monitoring programme in The Low Arctic. The study area is situated in Kobbefjord, approx. 20 km from Nuuk. The Nuuk Basis program is coordinated with the monitoring program at Zackenberg, and was established in 2007 with full implementation in 2008.

Further information: Director of Research Department, Jesper Madsen

Greenland Ecosystem Monitoring (website for the monitoring taking place in Zackenberg and Nuuk)

Forskningsstation Zackenberg - Siriuspatruljens mindre kendte nabo' (DMUNyt April 2008)

'Klimaændringerne vil medføre store forandringer i Nordøstgrønlands natur' (DMUNyt April 2008. Presentation of the book: High-Arctic Ecosystem Dynamics in a Changing Climate - Ten years of Monitoring and Research at Zackenberg Research Station, Northeast Greenland, Advances in Ecological Research, Vol. 40, Academic Press. (Summary of ten years' results from Zackenberg)

New leaflet with results from the research station at New leaflet with resultats fróm the researchsstation Zackenberg (DMUNyt Dec 2008)

'Rapid advancement of spring in the High Arctic' (DMUNyt June 2007)

'Nye resultater øger behovet for længere overvågning af miljøet i Grønland ' (DMUNyt Dec 2008, about methane release from the tundra (in Danish)) 'Large tundra methane burst during onset of freezing' mras@dmu.dk
Nyt hæfte om resultaterne fra forskningsstation Zackenberg (DMUNyt dec. 2008)

+ More

Formalin pollution of watercourses varies according to fish farm type

7 January 2009 - Formalin is used as a treatment to combat parasites in aquaculture. Photo: Dansk Akvakultur

By Steen Voigt - There are considerable differences in the degree to which the anti-parasite treatment formalin is broken down in various types of freshwater aquaculture and in the final end, therefore, in the amount of formalin released to adjacent watercourses. This is demonstrated in a study undertaken by the National Environmental Research Institute, Aarhus University, in collaboration with DTU Aqua.

The experiments, among other things, reveal that short-term immediate reduction of the formalin added in a traditional flow-through fish farm with earth ponds/channels and simple sedimentation basins is under 10 percent. This is also the case for fish farms with concrete ponds/channels, generally with a certain amount of recirculation and a number of plant lagoons. However, for fish farms with a high degree of recirculation, biofilters, sludge cones and plant lagoons, up to 30 per cent of the initial amount of formalin added is removed in this way. Therefore almost one-third of the amount of formalin added in this type of plant does not produce the desired anti-parasitic effect. Furthermore, use of formalin in these fish farms is, according to the branch association Dansk Akvakultur, often over three times as high per kg of fish produced, as parasite infections are more common in this type of plant. However, it is this type of plant that displays the lowest release of formalin to adjacent watercourses.

The complete set of results are presented in the report ’Omsætning af formalin i danske dambrug’ (in Danish).

Senior Scientist Ole Sortkjær, tel. 8920 1468, os@dmu.dk

Omsætning af formalin i danske dambrug. Sortkjær, O. & Pedersen, L-F. 2008. Danmarks Miljøundersøgelser, Aarhus Universitet 126 s. – Faglig rapport fra DMU nr. 699.Summary | The entire report in pdf format (kB) (both in Danish)

Related article:
Parasitbekæmpelse i dambrug mulig med mindre mængder miljøskadelige stoffer (in Danish)

 
 

Source: Denmark's Ministry of the Environment
Press consultantship
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