Huxley's Alia Khan publishes new research about relationship between snow algae and advanced melting in Antarctica

According to new research by Western Washington University Assistant Professor of Environmental Science Alia Khan,  red and green algae growing on snow in the Antarctic Peninsula causes significant extra snowmelt that is on par with melt from dust on snow in the Rocky Mountains, according to a first-of-its-kind scientific research study led by Khan.

"These algal blooms lower the snow and ice's albedo, or its ability to reflect light," said Khan, and could have serious impacts on regional climate, snow and ice melt, freshwater availability, and ecosystems according to the research, which was just published in the European Geosciences Union’s journal, The Cryosphere.

“Warming along the Antarctic Peninsula is causing drastic changes in snow and ice melt, as well as ecosystem responses,” said Khan. “We are seeing these algae blooms spread across wide areas along the coast. The blooms can be so intense and dark, like wearing a dark t-shirt on a sunny day, that they warm up the surface and cause more melting. The warming is likely expanding and strengthening the snow algae bloom season, which could continue to increase in this region of Antarctica as the climate continues to warm.” 

Khan investigated the impacts of red and green algae on albedo and on "radiative forcing," or how much energy the surface absorbs. Darker surfaces decrease albedo and increase radiative forcing, and positive radiative forcing causes the planet to warm. This is the first time that radiative forcing effects from algae have been estimated in the Antarctic Peninsula. Khan and her fellow researchers conducted this research by taking ground-based spectral albedo measurements of red and green snow algae at three sites in January 2018 and then modeled the radiative forcing using historical multi-year measurements of solar radiation at Palmer Station in Antarctica. Two of the ground sites were on King George Island, north of Palmer Station, and one was on Nelson Island. Because algal blooms are linked to animal waste, which produces the nutrients that the algae need to grow, the researchers chose sites that seals, penguins, and birds frequent. 

When compared with clean snow, the scientists found that green algae patches reduced snow albedo by 40 percent, and red algae patches reduced albedo by 20 percent. Green snow algae contain more chlorophyll than red snow algae and therefore absorb more solar radiation, reducing albedo by a greater amount for the same concentration of algae in the snow. As a result, radiative forcing averages are twice as high for green patches compared with red patches. During peak growing season, in austral summer, the increase in radiative forcing is about 26 watts per square meter, and about 13 watts per square meters for red algae. These amounts of radiative forcing are comparable to those caused by dust on snow in the mid-latitudes, such as in the Rocky Mountains, which advances snowmelt there. In the Antarctic Peninsula, algal blooms result in about 3,700 cubic meters, or over a million gallons of additional snow melt per year.

”Antarctica is already an incredibly beautiful place, and snow algae blooms add an extra artistic dimension,” said Ted Scambos, a polar researcher at the Cooperative Institute for Research in the Environmental Sciences and co-author of the study. “But like so many natural systems, the change in climate is pushing things to new extremes, with some unwanted consequences. We’re seeing that these new darker and more widespread blooms are having a knock-on effect of accelerating melting, a feedback that makes the ice retreat a little faster.” 

The results of this research show that snow algae play a significant role in snowmelt in the AP regions where they occur, and should be accounted for in future estimates of ice-free expansion in the AP region. Future research will focus on a wider mapping the spread of algae blooms, and on the climate events that create the most intense blooms.
 

Red and green algae on snow and glaciers on the Antarctic Peninsula.
Western's Alia Khan and Chilean colleague Edgardo Sepulveda collect spectra albedo measurements in front of Collins Glacier on King George Island in Antarctica