climate clarification albedo definition: the extent to which an object reflects light from the sun

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Climate clarification Albedo Definition: the extent to which an object reflects light from the sun Range of values: 0 to 1 Impact: high albedo, high reflectance less solar energy absorbed by object. Typical albedo Snow0.8-0.9 Tundra shrubs0.2 summer 0.6 snow covered - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Climate clarification

Albedo

Definition: the extent to which an object reflects light from the sun

Range of values: 0 to 1

Impact: high albedo, high reflectance less solar energy absorbed by object

Typical albedo

Snow 0.8-0.9Tundra shrubs 0.2 summer

0.6 snow covered

Amazon forest 0.13Amazon ranchland 0.18

Boreal forest 0.08Boreal grass 0.2

Feedback loops

Warming will melt sea ice and promote growth of shrubs in the arctic

Puddles and shrubs have lower albedo (reflectance) than ice and tundra

Puddles and shrubs will warm up rather than reflect solar energy

Warm puddles and shrubs will increase ice melt and promote further shrubification

Feedback effects on climate

Impact of Deforestation Ranchland has higher albedo 0.18 vs 0.13 Surface absorbs less energy Cooling effect

Ranchland has much less evaporationWarming effect

Net effect WARMING

+- indicates effect of foreston temperature

Feedback effects on climate

Impact of Deforestation

Grassland has higher albedo0.20 vs 0.08Surface absorbs less energyCooling effect

Grassland has slightly less evaporationWarming effect

Net effect ?????

+- indicates effect of foreston temperature

Humans, fisheries and tough conservation decisions

A Case study:

Lake Victoria’s Nile perch fishery and

cichlid biodiversity

Lake Victoria• Largest lake in Africa (68,800

km2), seventh in the world by volume.

• Tanzania, Uganda and Kenya all share the lake and its resources, but regulations governing resources are different in each country.

• Annual catch: 400-500,000 tons bringing in US$250,000-500,000.

• 2 million people depend directly or indirectly on fishing activities.

European History

1858 “discovered” by John Speke- sparsely populated region- subsistence fishery (small native species)

1902 – colonial government links lake to Mombasa1930 – Europeans had deforested watershed

- planted tea coffee sugar tobacco cotton- population had exploded- urban centres provided market for fish

1950 – native tilapia commercially extinct1951 - English introduce non-native tilapia1955 – English introduce Nile Perch

Fishing history – the early days

NgegeCatfishHaplochromines

Impacts of Nile perch

1955 – introduced to Lake Victoria

1969-70 Haplochromines 83% biomassNile perch 0.05%

1980’s Nile Perch 80% biomassHaplochromines <1%

Massive loss diversity400+ 200 species

Fishing history – the next 30 years Decline

has continued

Lake Victoria – summary so far

• The local multi-species fishery is now dominated by 3 species and supplies an international market

• 200 endemic Cichlid species were driven to extinction in 30 years

• Overfishing, industrial and agricultural pollution, an increasing human population and noxious water weeds, all threaten the sustainability of Lake Victoria.

• The Nile Perch is being overfished.

What happened next?

Intensive fishing led to a resurgence of native species

Haplochromine cichlids, particularly pelagic species recovered

Three areas acted as refugia- Wetlands and rocky habitats- Hypoxic areas - Satellite lakes

The future?

But current environment is very different

New fauna will differ in richness, composition and ecosystem function

Award winning documentary by Hubert Sauper is a tale about Lake Victoria, humans in the north and south, globalization,corporate corruptness, and fish.

The following are excerpts from the film.

The sociopolitical context

If goal is to conserve the remaining cichlid diversity what should conservation biologists do?

Options?

‘The Roundtable’The Lake Victoria Fisheries Research project has organised fisheries managers to work on quantifying the fisheries stocks of Lake Victoria and has also managed to bring together scientists from the 3 countries to exchange views and identify gaps in research and recommend how to deal with those gaps.

Planning for the lake’s future (economically and biologically) may proceed with a two-pronged approach:

1. Managing the fisheries to maintain the greatly increased yields and;

“The fisheries managers”

2. Conservation of the remaining indigenous species.

“The conservation biologists”

Lake Victoria Fisheries Organization (LVFO) comprises stakeholders whose objective is to

“protect and restore the lake”.

Where is the political power? Whose interests are being protected?

Given the population pressure and the industry/political pressure what would YOUR conservation strategy be?

Possible avenues for biodiversity conservation

Conservation of habitat and biodiversity will only succeed if water quality is improved – nutrient levels and toxic contamination should be controlled

Stock management strategies linked to rational regulation of fishing effort are needed

Representative habitats in the lake should be conserved with focus on high diversity areas, refugia, satellite lakes and shoreline wetlands

Development of an integrated basin wide plan - international cooperation is necessary to regulate nutrient influx and fishing pressure

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