Global status on water-related ecosystems and acceleration needs to achieve SDG6 target 6 by 2030

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CASE STUDY: SEASONAL WATER

Siberia’s thawing permafrost

Changes in thermokarst lakes have been associated with changes in temperatures,

Above-average rates of warming in the Arctic

precipitation and snow cover, with climatic

(Anisimov and others, 2007) have led to changes

effects, surface geology and very flat terrain

in the lake-rich ecosystems of the continuous

(which is impacted by seawater flooding) also

permafrost zone. Many of the lakes in

responsible (Nitze and others, 2017). These

permafrost regions are likely of thermokarst

changes affect around 2 million people – mainly

origin (Grosse, Jones and Arp, 2013), meaning

indigenous – living in north-central and north-

they are formed in a depression left by thawing

eastern Siberia, whose livelihoods depend

permafrost (Bryksina and Polishschuk, 2015).

heavily on fishing, hunting and reindeer

Patterns of general lake expansion are a

husbandry, all of which are impacted by climate

common feature of continuous permafrost

conditions. More frequent thawing, earlier

zones (Smith and others, 2005). In western

melting and later river-ice formation are affecting

Siberia, thermokarst lakes have been increasing

animals’ migration patterns, which is testing the

at a faster rate in the continuous permafrost

resilience of these communities. More frequent

zone than in the discontinuous permafrost zone

and severe seasonal floods are also destroying

(Chetan and others, 2020; Vonk and others,

vital infrastructure and threatening entire villages

2015). Typically, thermokarst lakes are shallow,

with permanent flooding (Stambler, 2020).

though their depths vary significantly depending

Climate change is accelerating permafrost

on the season, with some parts even drying out

thawing, which in turn is generating further

in summer (Manasypov and others, 2020), as

climate change. Furthermore, Arctic thermokarst

their main source of water comes from

lakes are both methane point sources and

atmospheric precipitation and spring snowmelt.

potential carbon dioxide sinks, which means

Western Siberian lakes tend to be shallower than

their expansion can lead to large-scale increases

Alaskan and Canadian thermokarst lakes of

or decreases in greenhouse gas emissions, thus

similar size.

indicating an urgent need for them to be better constrained (in ‘t Zandt, Liebner and Welte, 2020).

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PROGRESS ON FRESHWATER ECOSYSTEMS - 2021


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Global status on water-related ecosystems and acceleration needs to achieve SDG6 target 6 by 2030 by Christina Dian Parmionova - Issuu