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529229
Impacts of Global Warming on the Arctic
Description
A Level (First Year) Geography Mind Map on Impacts of Global Warming on the Arctic, created by Melissa Cheung on 05/02/2014.
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geography
geography
a level (first year)
Mind Map by
Melissa Cheung
, updated more than 1 year ago
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Created by
Melissa Cheung
almost 11 years ago
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Resource summary
Impacts of Global Warming on the Arctic
Environmental Impacts
Increased extent and no. of Northern Coniferous (boreal forest) fires in Arctic Russia
10 million burn each year
Losing 0.8% of the world's coniferous forest
Boreal ecosystems = 37% of the world's carbon pool on land
They are effective carbon sinks
A forest, ocean, or other natural environment that absorbs carbon dioxide from the atmosphere
Tree line moving North into higher altitudes
The edge of the habitat where trees grow
Thawing out of permafrost
Permanently frozen ground
Releases large quantities of stored methane
ENHANCED GREENHOUSE EFFECT
1kg of methane will create the same warming as 21kg of carbon doixide
The ground becomes softer which could lead to sinking of buildings and infrastructure
Siberia
Cracks have appeared in roads and airport runways
Allows easier oil extraction + large scale agriculture
Up to 40% of total amount (esp. in Siberia)
Tundra ecosystems being lost
Changes in biodiversity
Northern shift of certain species
Increased coastal erosion
Land weakening after permafrost melts
More waves and storm surges
Less protection of sea ice
Socio-economic Impacts
Threatening 155,000 Inuit inhabitants
Weaker and thinner sea ice collapses
Exposed to more ocean waves and storms
Less ice to act as a natural barrier
High risk of flooding
24 Inuit villages in Alaska are constantly under threat
Decline in marine stocks
Affects food and income source
70% of Inuit income is from paid employment or hunting-fishing
To import replacement food would cost US $1m and provide less iron, magnesium and calcium then the natural diet
Loss of hunting culture + food security for indigenous peoples
Ecological Impacts
Warmer water = reduced quantity of marine plants
Less plants = less smaller + bigger fish species (e.g. halibut)
This means less larger marine species (e.g. seals) = less polar bears
NEGATIVE MULTIPLIER EFFECT
Hudson Bay is now ice-free for 3 weeks longer than it was in 1985
Less time for polar bears to hunt the reduced no. of seals
Less body fat = less chance of survival during summer
ALTERNATIVELY: less ice = more sunlight for phytoplankton = more fish (that eat it) = more seals = more polar bears
Certain species may face extinction
Positive Impacts
Greater run-off = increased amount of nutrients + sediment = more coastal + wetland bog ecosystems = more habitats
Annual freshwater run-off into Arctic Ocean predicted to rise by 15% (Siberia)
NEGATIVES
Releases methane
Can impact OCEAN CURRENTS / THERMOHALINE CIRCULATION
E.g. North Atlantic Drift that keeps North-West Europe warm
Increased access for marine shipping between Europe through the Pacific to Asia
Majorly cuts cost of exporting products
NEGATIVES
Could lead to further exploitation of Arctic
Greater frequent use of passage increases risk of pollution and oil spills
Russia starts to allow nuclear wast disposal
Before: only open 6 weeks in Aug-Oct
Future: 120 days of ice free route by end of century
2007: North West Passage between Canada + Arctic melted enough to allow shipping through for the first time
The Northern Sea Route
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