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January/February 2010 issue


INTERNATIONAL POLAR YEAR

Icefields of dreams   (Page 2 of 5)

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For five decades, scientists have flocked to a research camp in the Yukon to study the surrounding mountains and glaciers. The food and showers are hot, the camaraderie is contagious and the possibilities for discovery are endless.


By Teresa Earle with photography by Fritz Mueller
KLRS is known for hearty meals in the mess hall.
Photo: Fritz Mueller
Home base: Dig Kluane Lake Research Station’s community vibe
Field Report: An interview with Kluane photographer Fritz Mueller
Lay of the land: Investigating climate change’s impact on the Arctic landscape part 1 and part 2
Caribou country: Follow the caribou’s migration patterns on the tundra
FEATURE STORIES & EXTRAS
  • What is IPY?

    International Polar Year (IPY) 2007-08 is a collaborative international effort to research the polar regions. Discover its key issues. Read more »
  • Community research station

    At the Kluane Lake Research Station, what’s happening in the Arctic is a family affair. Read more »
  • Are the Inuit Healthy?

    A mass health checkup of the Inuit attempts to set right a terrifying legacy left by the C.D. Howe. Read more »
  • The Arctic mercury mystery

    Scientists rush to unlock why Mercury taints the Arctic air and what this means for the planet. Read more »
  • A Canadian scientist in Norway

    Does sending a geography student to Norway offer the answer to fostering Arctic scientists of the future?
    Read more »
  • The Future of Arctic Research

    After the glut of International Polar Year funding evaporates, what does the future hold for Arctic exploration? Read more »
  • Multimedia

    Discover videos, interactive features and photo essays mapping the issues, science and communities behind the International Polar Year.
    View now »

Even on the longest days of the northern summer, the morning sun takes a while to warm the bluffs lining Printers Pass, about 20 kilometres north of KLRS in the Ruby Range. A mug of coffee and a bowl of oatmeal take the edge off the cold as Queen’s University ecologist Ryan Danby and his field assistant Aimée Brisebois prepare for another workday. Juneau, Danby’s yellow Lab, wags his whole body excitedly as they pack lunches and shoulder backpacks. All is quiet except for the shrill “eep!” of collared pikas scampering around this alpine Eden.

Brisebois and Danby are setting out to take soil samples and record soil temperature using buried thermistors. They’ll also spend a lot of time hunched over a one-squaremetre quadrat, a frame used by ecologists to systematically measure vegetation. Much of Danby’s research focuses on upward advances in the treeline — the transition zone between boreal forest and subarctic alpine tundra — in response to a warming climate. Using tree-ring analysis, aerial photography and GIS mapping, he has documented rapid treeline advances, challenging conventional thinking that such movement would be gradual.

Danby is part of a network of circumpolar researchers who collaborated on an International Polar Year (IPY) project investigating changes in the Arctic treeline. His interests are broad and interdisciplinary, which helps explain why he favours the flexibility of a tent to the comforts of a fixed camp. Danby and Brisebois will stay in the pass for four nights before hiking back to KLRS to shower and resupply for their next stint in the field.

Danby first came to this area in 1996 to work on a master’s degree in environmental studies, looking at ways of integrating ecology with park management. He couldn’t have picked a better destination. Prompted by the construction of the Alaska Highway during the Second World War, the Canadian government had set aside a triangle of wilderness in southwestern Yukon as a wildlife reserve. Kluane National Park and Reserve is the 21,980-square-kilometre legacy of this decision. Combined with adjacent parks — Tatshenshini- Alsek Park in British Columbia and Wrangell-Saint Elias National Park and Glacier Bay National Park in the United States — it forms the world’s largest international protected zone. Noted for many superlatives — it is home to North America’s most genetically diverse population of grizzly bears, for example, and contains the planet’s largest non-polar icefields — Kluane National Park is the research station’s wild backyard.

“I don’t know if there’s a suitable adjective that really describes everything here in one word,” says Danby. “It’s the place, it’s the people … I feel comfortable here.”

A third-generation KLRS alumni, Danby conducted his Ph.D. fieldwork here with University of Alberta ecology professor David Hik, who did his research here with Krebs in the 1980s during a landmark study of boreal forest ecology. From 1986 to 1996, led by Krebs, nine professors from three universities, 26 grad students and 93 assistants and technicians participated in an academic assault on the forest. The star of the Kluane Boreal Forest Ecosystem Project was the snowshoe hare, a keystone species that’s central to the fate of many other animals and plants, but the body of work that emerged from the study was far-reaching. As a large-scale examination of an entire ecosystem — one that circles the globe and remains relatively intact — Kluane’s boreal study has global currency, says Hik. It became a model for ecological research around the world.


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Comments on this articleLeave a comment

Your post really informative.It will be a growing area to watch this year. Like you say, comments keep the conversation going.They also provide additional insight to the readers and the bloggers. Comments offer a different perspective and put a
"face" to the readership.Orange County Web Design

Submitted by maxer on Friday, January 28, 2011


I am glad to read this post, its an interesting one. I am always searching for quality posts and articles and this is what I found here, I hope you will be adding more in future. Thanks

Submitted by cheap Casual Shoes on Wednesday, September 29, 2010


I wish I was a scientist, because I believe in what these are doing and I wish I could participate in determining the facts in this issue. There is a lot of science that I think most people are particularly unaware of and it's important the information get out. I envy the writer's ability to cover this story. The best I can do is bug my MP to get some traction on the issue. Good luck writer and scientists all. The north is Canada and we shouldn't forget about it.

Submitted by Diane on Monday, February 15, 2010


Nice to read an article on another promising young Labradorian! Good Luck, Robert!!

Submitted by Kim Morris, Cartwright, Labrador on Sunday, January 31, 2010


Not really a cause for rejoicing. Dozens of reports indicate this ice is thin and that the Arctic has changed in a disastrous way.
http://www.cbc.ca/technology/story/2009/02/21/arctic-ice.html

http://www.metronews.ca/ottawa/canada/article/414964melt-season-for-canadian-arctic-sea-ice-outpacing-global-average-study

http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2009/jan/25/melting-arctic-north-pole-explorers

http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2007/sep/05/climatechange.sciencenews

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/02/science/earth/02arct.html

Submitted by Anon on Friday, January 15, 2010


I was fortunate enough to do some research at KLRS with the University of Ottawa and let me tell you, Andy and the gang really make you feel at home. I wish you all the best with renovations and I hope to one day go back to the station to show my children how wonderful it is.

Submitted by Tina Girardin on Wednesday, January 13, 2010


It's good to know that polar ice is increasing again: "A report from the US National Snow and Ice Data Center in Colorado finds that Arctic summer sea ice has increased by 409,000 square miles, or 26 per cent, since 2007."

Submitted by Ralph Grabowski on Wednesday, January 13, 2010








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