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  • 31
    May
    2013
    3:42pm, EDT

    Whale songs and melting ice: Stories of a changing Arctic

    M.P. Heide-Jorgensen

    Two bowhead whales cavort in Disko Bay, West Greenland.

    By Douglas Main
    LiveScience

    NEW YORK — By tracking and listening to whales, scientists have unlocked secrets about the dramatic changes currently under way in the Arctic. They've also learned that these whales are talented singers.

    In a wide-ranging talk here at the American Museum of Natural History, researchers and a documentary filmmaker revealed how declining levels of ice have affected the Arctic, as well as the humans who dwell there. Their stories, recounted during a session of the World Science Festival, billed as an annual celebration and exploration of science, reveal the difficulty and beauty of working in the harsh, and quickly changing, environment of the far North.

    There, ice is paramount to the traditional order of life. "Ice in the Arctic is everybody's best friend," said Kate Stafford, a researcher at the University of Washington. "All animals and people depend on it." [On Ice: Stunning Images of Canadian Arctic]

    Whale song
    Stafford has used special devices to listen to the songs of bowhead whales, which has allowed her to track their movements and estimate their populations. In a 2012 study, she heard many more bowhead calls than expected, suggesting that the huge beasts — once hunted to the brink of extinction — may be rebounding. The songs were also more complex than those of other whales, sounding almost like a bird's song, she said.

    Glenn Williams, NIST.

    Watery unicorns? Narwhals brandish their iconic tusks amid the icy seas.

    Stafford also found that, in some cases, bowheads in the Fram Strait, east of Greenland, seem to prefer hanging out under old, thick ice. This is perhaps because the ice acts as a better "theater" in which to broadcast their beautiful calls, or perhaps it offers more protection from killer whales, she said. As ice continues to dwindle in the Arctic — 2012 saw the smallest extent of winter ice ever recorded — killer whales can advance farther north, pressuring even the enormous bowhead whales.

    'Unicorns of the sea'
    University of Washington researcher Kristin Laidre shared the experiences she's had with narwhals, also known as "unicorns of the sea." She recounted the difficulties involved in attaching satellite tags to these reclusive whales, which live far offshore and feed more than 1 mile (1.6 kilometers) under the surface. But her persistence has paid off, and she has been able to attach tags to several of the animals; the tags record where narwhals go and the temperature of the water they swim through. This data has been inputted into computer models that have allowed researchers to better understand the Arctic climate, Laidre told LiveScience. "The whales sample the ocean for us," she said.

    Sarah Robertson, a documentary filmmaker, has witnessed male narwhals "jousting" with their long tusks, which are actually teeth. Contrary to its name, though, jousting is a rather gentle affair, where males cross tusks and slide them against one another. "You get the sense that they don't want to hurt the other," Robertson said.

    Once again, though, the whales acted as sentinels for larger changes. Robertson witnessed the animals jousting while she was traveling with Inupiat guides, who knew from experience that this rare behavior only takes place in the spring, just before the ice breaks up. Sure enough, 12 hours after the whales jousted, the ice gave way. "Clearly, the narwhals knew something we didn't," she said.

    Angels in the abyss
    Researchers also discussed their experiences with beluga whales, also known as "canaries of the sea" because of their beautiful songs. Robertson has made many dives in the frigid water to document the pure-white giants, which "glow like angels in the dark abyss," she said. One time, a beluga echo-located right in front of Robertson, bouncing sound beams off her body. "I was scared," she said.

    Scott McVay, who was the first to document the six-octave song of the humpback whale, recounted the time in 1973 when he captured the first-ever video of a bowhead whale from the air. With only minutes of fuel left in the helicopter, his team captured a bowhead rising out of the water and blowing out water. He read a poem to commemorate the event. "Miracles sometimes stand alone," went one of the lines.  

    Perhaps human performance isn't appreciated only by humans. Musician Garth Stevenson told the story of the trip he took with whale researchers to Antarctica, where he played a piece inspired by a whale song on his bass. Just after he finished, 12 Sei whales approached the boat. "It was a very magical experience," he said. Stevenson played a similar piece during the event while a video of his trip played in the background.

    A common thread throughout the event was the changes witnessed by researchers and locals, mostly involving the retreat of sea ice. With less ice, it is harder for subsistence hunters to catch these animals. Likewise, the lack of ice has harmful effects on the whales, which need it for protection from killer whales, and to seek out prey — like Arctic cod — that prefer to live beneath the ice. The researchers are racing to capture data before more changes occur.

    "It's urgent to get as much information as possible now," Laidre said. And the whales are helping to do just that.

    Email Douglas Main or follow him on Twitter or Google+. Follow us @OAPlanet, Facebook or Google+. Original article on LiveScience's OurAmazingPlanet.

    • In Photos: Tracking Humpback Whales
    • Dangers in the Deep: 10 Scariest Sea Creatures
    • Gallery: Polar Bears Swimming in the Arctic Ocean

    Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    7 comments

    Beautiful and gentle creatures, we obviously can learn alot from them.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: whales, changes, featured, inuits, sea-ice, killer-whales, bowhead-whales, whale-songs
  • 14
    Feb
    2013
    6:38pm, EST

    Thinning ice changes ecosystem in 'New Arctic'

    Stefan Hendricks, Alfred Wegener Institute

    icebreaker Polarstern navitates the central Arctic in summer 2012.

    By Becky Oskin
    LiveScience

    In the Arctic Ocean, algae is manna from heaven. Clumps of the aquatic life drop from the sea ice to the ocean floor below, occasionally feeding otherworldly creatures that live there, such as sea cucumbers and brittle stars.

    During 2012's record ice melt in the Arctic, when the ice cover over the ocean shrank to the lowest levels ever seen, researchers explored the region's seas with remotely operated vehicles. They discovered the thinning ice was speeding up algal growth.

    Not only was more algae clinging to the underside of the thinning ice, but chunks of algae up to 20 inches (50 centimeters) in size littered the seafloor, covering 10 percent of the muddy bottom.

    "We had cameras showing that, partially, the seafloor was green with ice algae deposits," Antje Boetius, a biological oceanographer at the Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology in Germany and lead author of the study, said in an email interview. [Video: Dive below the Arctic ice]

    Mar Fernandez-Mendez, Alfred Wegener Institute

    Melosira arctica grows on the bottom side of ice floes in the Arctic Ocean.

    The vigorous algae growth could change the amount of carbon stored in the Arctic because the clumps trap carbon after falling to the seafloor. The additional food for sea creatures this algae provides could also shift the Arctic's biodiversity in unknown ways, the researchers said.

    "The Arctic deep sea is normally very nutrient-limited," Boetius told OurAmazingPlanet. "We believe that we have observed a new phenomenon, which is connected to the sea ice decline, and which may change the way the Arctic ecosystem functions."

    Trolling the floor
    The scientists sailed through the thinning ice in late summer 2012 aboard the research icebreaker RV Polarstern. They towed cameras and sensors along the seafloor, sent remotely operated vehicles beneath the ice, and collected water, ice and sediments for additional studies.

    Clinging to the ice like vines, the 3-foot-long (1 meter) algae strands share a similarity in color and shape with "Star Wars" character Chewbacca's dreadlocks. While many kinds of algae grow under the Arctic ice, the clumps of Melosira arctica are particularly heavy compared with its brethren, and so fall to the seafloor instead of wafting in the waves to be consumed by near-surface dwellers.

    Antje Boetius, Alfred Wegener Institute

    Sea cucumbers eat up the Arctic algae.

    The rapid growth of algae beneath the ice in 2012, quickly followed by a massive deluge of sea scum onto the ocean floor, has never been seen before, Boetius said.

    "It was already known that ice algae could grow in the ice and form gigantic accumulations under the ice. But it was believed that this takes very long and that these biomasses will remain in the ice or sink out only at the warming coasts, not in the middle of the basins," she said.

    The researchers think the algae clumps grew better and faster in 2012 because the Arctic's thinning ice made more sunlight available underneath the ice floes.

    Signs of recent change
    Once it arrives at the seafloor, up to 14,700 feet (4,500 m) below the ocean's surface, the algae gets chewed up by bottom feeders, and bacteria feed on what's left.

    By calculating how much carbon and nutrients were cycled by the algae and its predators, the research team confirmed the rapid growth in 2012 was a new phenomenon.

    "We have seen how this was remineralized by seafloor bacteria. Had this occurred many times before, the seafloor would look very different," Boetius said.

    The expedition's zoologist also analyzed the stomach contents of sea cucumbers from the deep Arctic sea: Algae extracted from their guts could still photosynthesize upon returning to the ship's laboratory, evidence that the algae clumps were relatively young. The animals also had highly developed gonads, another sign of recent access to a massive food supply.

    "I think we have probably seen a glimpse of the new Arctic," Boetius said.

    Reach Becky Oskin at boskin@techmedianetwork.com. Follow her on Twitter @beckyoskin. Follow OurAmazingPlanet on Twitter @OAPlanet. We're also on Facebook and Google+.

    • Image Gallery: Amazing Creatures from the Census of Marine Life
    • Polarstern Cruises The Polar Waters
    • 10 Things to Know About Sea Ice

    Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    6 comments

    Where's the proof algae has never formed there before? Where's the proof this record ice melt? (Remember the glaciers that covered North America; hoe fast did they melt?) Flotsam fed.gov science. People like this journalist and the so-called scientists who collected the data need to have their licen …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: carbon, featured, sea-ice, algae-growth, arctic-ice-melt
  • 13
    Feb
    2013
    4:36pm, EST

    Thick sea ice is disappearing from the Arctic, new satellite data show

    Seymour Laxon / University College London

    This is an Arctic sea ice ridge at one of the sites used to validate ice thickness measurements from the CroySat-2.

    By John Roach, Contributing Writer, NBC News

    Thick sea ice is disappearing from a broad swath of the Arctic, according to new satellite data that confirms estimates from computer models and suggests the region may be ice free during the summers sooner rather than later.

    The Arctic sea ice reached a new record minimum extent in 2012, when it covered nearly half the average area it did from 1979 to 2010. The new data show the Arctic sea ice volume in the fall, when it is at its lowest, has declined more than a third between 2003 and 2012. Ice volume in the winter has declined 9 percent.

    "Not only is the area getting smaller, but also its thickness is decreasing and making the ice more vulnerable to more rapid declines in the future," Christian Haas, a geophysicist at York University in Canada, told NBC News.

    Sea ice extent can change in response to melting from warmer ocean and air temperatures as well as getting shifted around by winds and currents, which can push it into thick piles.

    "The latter process would not change the volume of the ice," explained Haas. "But now we know that not only the area decreases, but also the thickness and therefore the total volume decreases."

    The new observations are the first data analyzed from the European Space Agency’s CryoSat-2 satellite, which was launched in 2010. It uses a technique called radar altimetry to measure the thickness of the sea ice, which reveals the volume of the ice there, not just how much of the Arctic it covers.

    A NASA satellite collected similar data between 2003 and 2008 and helped researchers verify a computer model used to compute ice volume based on weather records, sea-surface temperature and satellite imagery. 

    Axel Schweiger / UW

    Monthly sea ice volume anomalies from 1979 to the present calculated using the PIOMAS system.

    In recent years, that model, called the Pan-Arctic Ice Ocean Modeling and Assimilation System (PIOMAS), has generated some controversy because of the substantial ice loss it showed, according to the University of Washington, where it was built.

    "These (new) data essentially confirm that in the last few years, for which we haven’t really had data, the observations are very close to what we see in the model," Axel Schweiger, a polar scientist with the university’s Applied Physics Laboratory, said in a news release. 

    "So that increases our confidence for the overall time series from 1979 to present."

    In a follow-up telephone interview with NBC News, Schweiger added that for the eight-year satellite record, the estimates from PIOMAS have actually been less than what was observed.

    "We knew that our system was conservative, we had a sense of that," he said, "but this confirms it."

    Going forward, researchers will use the PIOMAS to forecast when the Arctic will be ice free in the summers, a phenomenon that may impact everything from global shipping to weather patterns. Some studies indicate that could come as early as 2040. 

    "As the satellite measurements show that not only the area decreases but also its thickness, it is actually becoming more likely that the ice will disappear sooner rather than later," Haas told NBC News.

    John Roach is a contributing writer to NBC News. To learn more about him, check out his website. 

    21 comments

    We can control population. We know exactly how it works, but chose to deny that it is a problem. Instead we get a bunch of people running around talking about treating the symptoms.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: environment, climate-change, arctic, featured, sea-ice

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John Roach, Contributing Writer, NBC News

John Roach is a contributing writer for NBC News. From climate change and mass extinctions to human evolution and deep space, his writing explores life on Earth and its place in the universe. He was a staff writer at the Environmental News Network for several years and has contributed to National Geographic News for more than a decade.

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