c u record global warming erodes wetlands ...€¦ · ocean waters and melting of moun-tain and...

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8 C olumbia U niversity RECORD April 19, 2002 A study led by Columbia researchers published in the March issue of “Wetlands,” the journal of the Society of Wetland Scientists, supports observations that the salt marshes of New York City’s Jamaica Bay near John F. Kennedy Interna- tional Airport are eroding rapidly, and in the coming decades may dis- appear altogether with rising sea lev- els as a result of global warming. In an analysis based on historical aerial photographs of several of the larger marsh islands, the scientists determined that 12 percent of the area’s marshlands had been lost since 1959. A more comprehensive exam- ination showed a 51 percent reduc- tion of island marshes between 1924 and 1999, with 38 percent loss of marsh vegetation occurring since 1974. Some of the smaller islands have lost up to 78 percent of their vegetation cover since 1974. The researchers found evidence that the rate of loss was accelerating and probably could not survive the oncoming rise of the ocean. Howev- er, they held out hope that trial restoration efforts, if begun soon, could stabilize the marshes. Because they are literally “drowning in place” from sediment starvation, remedia- tion efforts would likely include the placement of thin layers of sediment on the marsh surface, according to Ellen Hartig, the lead author and an ecologist, formerly at Columbia, now with the Federal Emergency Management Agency. “These efforts have had success in other wetlands,” she said. One major concern of the scientists is that the loss of the wetlands in Jamaica Bay could pose a danger to surrounding residential developments, which would be further exposed to flooding from storm surges. Hartig said while the National Park Service has been excellent in protecting the marshlands for the last 30 years, in the future the agency should take a stronger approach and adopt a hands-on role in managing the wetlands. In the past, she said, the thinking was that if the wetlands were left alone they would naturally thrive. While measured rates of marsh grass growth appear typical of other regional wetlands, the distribution of marsh grass is rather patchy, with many bare spots and water-filled pools where normally vegetation would be found. “From the air, many of the islands are so riddled with these pools that they resemble Swiss cheese,” said Vivien Gornitz, a geologist and spe- cial research scientist at the Goddard Institute for Space Studies at Colum- bia. These features indicate that the marshes are submerging, leading to plant die-off from within. Field work and mapping further substantiate that submergence is more significant than erosion of the island edges. As part of a regional report pre- pared for the U.S. National Assess- ment on Climate Variability and Change, a suite of sea-level rise pro- jections based on historical data and climate models was compared with plausible rates of marsh growth. This analysis suggests that if enough sed- iment could accumulate on the marshes, the marshes would survive all but the most extreme cases of future sea level rise. The fact that the marshes are shrinking even at cur- rent rates of sea level rise (around 3 millimeters per year in New York City) suggests that lack of sediments is an important cause of the wetlands losses, said Gornitz. In addition to Hartig and Gornitz, the study involved other researchers at the State University of New York at Stony Brook and the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation. Funding was provid- ed by the National Science Founda- tion, the National Park Service, and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. A major cause of the vanishing wetlands in the Queens borough is the disruption of the flow of water and the spread of sediment upon which marsh grasses depend. Repeated dredging of the bay for shipping channels and to provide landfill for the expansion of Kennedy Airport (built on wetlands beginning in 1942 before laws to protect them) over time has depleted Global Warming Erodes Wetlands Near Kennedy Airport, Columbia Study Finds the process of sediment deposition which nourishes the wetlands. The dredged shipping channels act as a kind of trap for sediment, preventing this nourishing material from wash- ing over the marshes and maintain- ing their growth. Urban development that closed off stream channels around the bay, waves from recreational boat traffic and heavy grazing by waterfowl contribute to the erosion of the marshes. In addition, development in Queens and adjacent Kings and Nas- sau County may have diminished sediment sources upland and blocked sediments deposits from washing into the bay after storms. “Further research is urgently needed to establish the causes of marsh loss,” said Gornitz. The researchers warned that at current rates of attrition, Spartina alterniflora, the dominant marsh grass, could disappear altogether within the next few decades, years before the full impact is felt from a projected one meter rise in the met- ropolitan area sea level due to global climate warming. The researchers suspect that the die-off of this marsh grass plays an important role in the marsh deterioration. An abnormally high population of mussels and apparent encroachment of sea let- tuce may be symptomatic of the transformation to more marine con- ditions as the marshes drown, or they could be actively contributing to the grass die-off. A rise in global temperatures due to increases in greenhouse gasses would cause thermal expansion of ocean waters and melting of moun- tain and high-latitude glaciers. Pro- jections call for a sea-level rise of one meter by the end of the century in metropolitan New York. “The fate of the island marshes of Jamaica Bay serves as a wake-up call regard- ing the hazards facing other coastal wetlands due to the intertwined impacts of human-induced stresses and sea-level rise,” the report stated. While heavy residential and industrial development and the con- struction of the airport has dramati- cally shrunk the size of the Jamaica Bay wetlands since the early decades of the 20th century it remains one of the largest coastal ecosystems in New York State. In 1972, the remaining marsh islands and Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge came under federal protection as part of the Gateway National Recreation Area, administered by the National Park Service. Along the Atlantic fly- way for migratory birds, the salt marshes are prime nesting and feed- ing sites for many shorebirds, including geese and ducks. Salt marshes near JFK Airport are eroding rapidly and may disappear altogether due to global warming. NASA's Chandra X-ray Observa- tory has found two stars—one too small, one too cold—that reveal cracks in our understanding of the structure of matter. These discoveries by a team of astronomers including Columbia Professor David Helfand open a new window on nuclear physics, offering a link between the vast cosmos and its tiniest con- stituents. Chandra's observations of stars RXJ1856.5-3754 and 3C58 suggest that the matter in these stars is even denser than nuclear matter found on Earth. This raises the possibility these stars are composed of pure quarks or contain crystals of sub-nuclear parti- cles that normally have only a fleet- ing existence following high-energy collisions. By combining Chandra and Hub- ble Space Telescope data, astronomers found that RXJ 1856 radiates like a solid body with a tem- perature of 1.2 million degrees fahrenheit (700,000 degrees Celsius) and has a diameter of about seven miles (11.3 kilometers). This size is too small to reconcile with standard models for neutron stars—until now the most extreme form of matter known. too small. "Taken at face value, the com- bined observational evidence points to a star composed not of neutrons, but of quarks in a form know as strange quark matter," said Jeremy Drake of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (CfA) in Cambridge, Mass., and lead author of a paper on RXJ1856 to appear in June 20 issue of “The Astrophysical Journal.” Quarks, thought to be the fundamental constituents of nuclear particles, have never been seen out- side a nucleus in Earth-bound labo- ratories. Observations by Chandra of 3C58 also yielded startling results. A team composed of Patrick Slane and Steven Murray, also of CfA, and Helfand failed to detect the expected X-radiation from the hot surface of 3C58, a neutron star believed tohave been created in an explosion wit- nessed by Chinese and Japanese astronomers in 1181 AD. The team concluded that the star has a temper- ature of less than one million degrees celsius, which is far below the pre- dicted value. "Our observations of 3C58 offer the first compelling test of models for how neutron stars cool and, the stan- dard theory fails," said Helfand. "It appears that neutron stars aren't pure neutrons after all—new forms of matter are required." A teaspoonful of neutron star material weighs a billion tons, as much as all the cars, trucks and buses on Earth. Its extraordinary density is equivalent to that of the nucleus of an atom with all of the typical space between the atoms and their nuclei removed. An atom's nucleus is composed of positively charged protons and neutral neutrons, parti- cles so small that 100 billion trillion of them would fit on the head of a pin. Protons and neutrons are com- posed of even smaller particles called quarks, the basic building blocks of matter. Enormous atom smashers are designed to probe the forces between quarks and the struc- ture of the nucleus by smashing high-energy beams of nuclei into each other and observing the violent aftermath for a fraction of a second. Drake cautioned that the observa- tions of RXJ1856 could be inter- preted as a more normal neutron star with a hot spot. Such a model is under consideration by Fred Walter of the State University of New York, Stony Brook, one of the discoverers of RXJ1856, which was originally found in 1996 by the German Roet- gen satellite. However, the hot spot model requires a very special orien- tation of the star with respect to the Earth to explain the absence of pul- sations, which would be expected from the hot spot. The probability of such an orientation is quite small. Cosmic X-Rays Reveal Evidence for New Matter Form More than 100 scientists and researchers from Columbia and the Canadian province of Québec engaged in recent discussions on the Columbia campus aimed at build- ing research partnerships in the emerging field of nanotechnology. The Québec-Columbia Nan- otechnology Symposium, held at Davis Auditorium on April 11, brought together leading scientists from Columbia and research uni- versities in Québec with the inten- tion of forming collaborations on the frontier of nanoscale research in many disciplines. Executive Vice Provost Michael Crow told the gathering: “In an era where world class science increasingly means international science, we believe that committing to partnerships such as these will become vital for build- ing and sustaining research pro- grams.” The discussions were held with participants of NanoQuébec, the research network founded in 2001 by the province’s six research uni- versities: McGill, Montréal, Ecole Polytechnique, INRS, a center in the network of the Institut National pour la Recherche Scientifique, at the University of Québec, Laval and Sherbrooke. The network has com- mitted $5 million in research fund- ing to nanotechnology. The intent of the first meeting was for Columbia and Quebec researchers to learn where partner- ships are possible. Follow-up meet- ings are planned to focus in more detail on promising areas, accord- ing to Jeffrey Brancato, acting director of the Columbia Nan- otechnology Initiative. Columbia is one of six major research universities in the United States that have been designated by the National Science Founda- tion as national nanoscale research centers. The University received an initial U.S. government grant of $10.8 million to support the work of 16 primary researchers for five years in the Center for Electronic Transport in Molecular Nanostruc- tures. Professors Ronald Breslow, the National Medal of Science winner, and Horst Stormer, a Nobel Prize winner in physics, are scientific directors of the center. More than 50 researchers Uni- versity-wide are engaged in nanoscale research, including those at Columbia’s Fu Founda- tion School of Engineering and Applied Science, the Health Sci- ences Division and within diverse departments, such as chemistry and physics. Research involves the simulation of biological and inorganic materials; the synthesis and characterization of nanocrys- tals, nanotubes, and low-dimen- sional structures, and the fabrica- tion of small, functional biological machines that detect and move matter through a variety of micro- scopic methods. —Suzanne Trimel New Nanotechnology Initiative Launched with Province of Québec BY SUZANNE TRIMEL

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Page 1: C U RECORD Global Warming Erodes Wetlands ...€¦ · ocean waters and melting of moun-tain and high-latitude glaciers. Pro-jections call for a sea-level rise of one meter by the

8 C o l u m b i a U n i v e r s i t y RECORD April 19, 2002

A study led by Columbiaresearchers published in the Marchissue of “Wetlands,” the journal ofthe Society of Wetland Scientists,supports observations that the saltmarshes of New York City’s JamaicaBay near John F. Kennedy Interna-tional Airport are eroding rapidly,and in the coming decades may dis-appear altogether with rising sea lev-els as a result of global warming.

In an analysis based on historicalaerial photographs of several of thelarger marsh islands, the scientistsdetermined that 12 percent of thearea’s marshlands had been lost since1959. Amore comprehensive exam-ination showed a 51 percent reduc-tion of island marshes between 1924and 1999, with 38 percent loss ofmarsh vegetation occurring since1974. Some of the smaller islandshave lost up to 78 percent of theirvegetation cover since 1974.

The researchers found evidencethat the rate of loss was acceleratingand probably could not survive theoncoming rise of the ocean. Howev-er, they held out hope that trialrestoration efforts, if begun soon,could stabilize the marshes. Becausethey are literally “drowning in place”from sediment starvation, remedia-tion efforts would likely include theplacement of thin layers of sedimenton the marsh surface, according toEllen Hartig, the lead author and anecologist, formerly at Columbia,now with the Federal EmergencyManagement Agency.

“These efforts have had success inother wetlands,” she said. One majorconcern of the scientists is that theloss of the wetlands in Jamaica Baycould pose a danger to surroundingresidential developments, whichwould be further exposed to floodingfrom storm surges.

Hartig said while the NationalPark Service has been excellent inprotecting the marshlands for the last30 years, in the future the agencyshould take a stronger approach and

adopt a hands-on role in managingthe wetlands. In the past, she said, thethinking was that if the wetlandswere left alone they would naturallythrive.

While measured rates of marshgrass growth appear typical of otherregional wetlands, the distribution ofmarsh grass is rather patchy, withmany bare spots and water-filledpools where normally vegetationwould be found.

“From the air, many of the islandsare so riddled with these pools thatthey resemble Swiss cheese,” saidVivien Gornitz, a geologist and spe-cial research scientist at the GoddardInstitute for Space Studies at Colum-bia.

These features indicate that themarshes are submerging, leading toplant die-off from within. Field workand mapping further substantiate thatsubmergence is more significantthan erosion of the island edges.

As part of a regional report pre-pared for the U.S. National Assess-ment on Climate Variability andChange, a suite of sea-level rise pro-jections based on historical data andclimate models was compared withplausible rates of marsh growth. This

analysis suggests that if enough sed-iment could accumulate on themarshes, the marshes would surviveall but the most extreme cases offuture sea level rise. The fact that themarshes are shrinking even at cur-rent rates of sea level rise (around 3millimeters per year in New YorkCity) suggests that lack of sedimentsis an important cause of the wetlandslosses, said Gornitz.

In addition to Hartig and Gornitz,the study involved other researchersat the State University of New Yorkat Stony Brook and the New YorkState Department of EnvironmentalConservation. Funding was provid-ed by the National Science Founda-tion, the National Park Service, andthe National Aeronautics and SpaceAdministration.

A major cause of the vanishingwetlands in the Queens borough isthe disruption of the flow of waterand the spread of sediment uponwhich marsh grasses depend.Repeated dredging of the bay forshipping channels and to providelandfill for the expansion ofKennedy Airport (built on wetlandsbeginning in 1942 before laws toprotect them) over time has depleted

Global Warming Erodes Wetlands Near Kennedy Airport, Columbia Study Finds

the process of sediment depositionwhich nourishes the wetlands. Thedredged shipping channels act as akind of trap for sediment, preventingthis nourishing material from wash-ing over the marshes and maintain-ing their growth.

Urban development that closedoff stream channels around the bay,waves from recreational boat trafficand heavy grazing by waterfowlcontribute to the erosion of themarshes. In addition, development inQueens and adjacent Kings and Nas-sau County may have diminishedsediment sources upland andblocked sediments deposits fromwashing into the bay after storms.“Further research is urgently neededto establish the causes of marshloss,” said Gornitz.

The researchers warned that atcurrent rates of attrition, Spartinaalterniflora, the dominant marsh

grass, could disappear altogetherwithin the next few decades, yearsbefore the full impact is felt from aprojected one meter rise in the met-ropolitan area sea level due to globalclimate warming. The researcherssuspect that the die-off of this marshgrass plays an important role in themarsh deterioration. An abnormallyhigh population of mussels andapparent encroachment of sea let-tuce may be symptomatic of thetransformation to more marine con-ditions as the marshes drown, orthey could be actively contributingto the grass die-off.

A rise in global temperatures dueto increases in greenhouse gasseswould cause thermal expansion ofocean waters and melting of moun-tain and high-latitude glaciers. Pro-jections call for a sea-level rise ofone meter by the end of the centuryin metropolitan New York. “The fateof the island marshes of JamaicaBay serves as a wake-up call regard-ing the hazards facing other coastalwetlands due to the intertwinedimpacts of human-induced stressesand sea-level rise,” the report stated.

While heavy residential andindustrial development and the con-struction of the airport has dramati-cally shrunk the size of the JamaicaBay wetlands since the earlydecades of the 20th century itremains one of the largest coastalecosystems in New York State. In1972, the remaining marsh islandsand Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refugecame under federal protection as partof the Gateway National RecreationArea, administered by the NationalPark Service. Along the Atlantic fly-way for migratory birds, the saltmarshes are prime nesting and feed-ing sites for many shorebirds,including geese and ducks.

Salt marshes near JFK Airport are eroding rapidly and may disappear altogether due to global warming.

NASA's Chandra X-ray Observa-tory has found two stars—one toosmall, one too cold—that revealcracks in our understanding of thestructure of matter. These discoveriesby a team of astronomers includingColumbia Professor David Helfandopen a new window on nuclearphysics, offering a link between thevast cosmos and its tiniest con-stituents.

Chandra's observations of starsRXJ1856.5-3754 and 3C58 suggestthat the matter in these stars is evendenser than nuclear matter found onEarth. This raises the possibility thesestars are composed of pure quarks orcontain crystals of sub-nuclear parti-cles that normally have only a fleet-ing existence following high-energycollisions.

By combining Chandra and Hub-ble Space Telescope data,astronomers found that RXJ 1856radiates like a solid body with a tem-perature of 1.2 million degreesfahrenheit (700,000 degrees Celsius)and has a diameter of about sevenmiles (11.3 kilometers). This size istoo small to reconcile with standardmodels for neutron stars—until nowthe most extreme form of matterknown. too small.

"Taken at face value, the com-bined observational evidence pointsto a star composed not of neutrons,

but of quarks in a form know asstrange quark matter," said JeremyDrake of the Harvard-SmithsonianCenter for Astrophysics (CfA) inCambridge, Mass., and lead authorof a paper on RXJ1856 to appear inJune 20 issue of “The AstrophysicalJournal.” Quarks, thought to be thefundamental constituents of nuclearparticles, have never been seen out-side a nucleus in Earth-bound labo-ratories.

Observations by Chandra of 3C58also yielded startling results. A teamcomposed of Patrick Slane andSteven Murray, also of CfA, andHelfand failed to detect the expectedX-radiation from the hot surface of3C58, a neutron star believed tohavebeen created in an explosion wit-nessed by Chinese and Japaneseastronomers in 1181 AD. The teamconcluded that the star has a temper-ature of less than one million degreescelsius, which is far below the pre-dicted value.

"Our observations of 3C58 offerthe first compelling test of models forhow neutron stars cool and, the stan-dard theory fails," said Helfand. "Itappears that neutron stars aren't pureneutrons after all—new forms ofmatter are required."

A teaspoonful of neutron starmaterial weighs a billion tons, asmuch as all the cars, trucks and buses

on Earth. Its extraordinary density isequivalent to that of the nucleus ofan atom with all of the typical spacebetween the atoms and their nucleiremoved. An atom's nucleus iscomposed of positively chargedprotons and neutral neutrons, parti-cles so small that 100 billion trillionof them would fit on the head of apin.

Protons and neutrons are com-posed of even smaller particlescalled quarks, the basic buildingblocks of matter. Enormous atomsmashers are designed to probe theforces between quarks and the struc-ture of the nucleus by smashinghigh-energy beams of nuclei intoeach other and observing the violentaftermath for a fraction of a second.

Drake cautioned that the observa-tions of RXJ1856 could be inter-preted as a more normal neutron starwith a hot spot. Such a model isunder consideration by Fred Walterof the State University of New York,Stony Brook, one of the discoverersof RXJ1856, which was originallyfound in 1996 by the German Roet-gen satellite. However, the hot spotmodel requires a very special orien-tation of the star with respect to theEarth to explain the absence of pul-sations, which would be expectedfrom the hot spot. The probability ofsuch an orientation is quite small.

Cosmic X-Rays Reveal Evidence for New Matter Form

More than 100 scientists andresearchers from Columbia and theCanadian province of Québecengaged in recent discussions on theColumbia campus aimed at build-ing research partnerships in theemerging field of nanotechnology.

The Québec-Columbia Nan-otechnology Symposium, held atDavis Auditorium on April 11,brought together leading scientistsfrom Columbia and research uni-versities in Québec with the inten-tion of forming collaborations onthe frontier of nanoscale research inmany disciplines. Executive ViceProvost Michael Crow told thegathering: “In an era where worldclass science increasingly meansinternational science, we believethat committing to partnerships suchas these will become vital for build-ing and sustaining research pro-grams.”

The discussions were held withparticipants of NanoQuébec, theresearch network founded in 2001by the province’s six research uni-versities: McGill, Montréal, EcolePolytechnique, INRS, a center in thenetwork of the Institut National pourla Recherche Scientifique, at theUniversity of Québec, Laval andSherbrooke. The network has com-mitted $5 million in research fund-ing to nanotechnology.

The intent of the first meetingwas for Columbia and Quebecresearchers to learn where partner-ships are possible. Follow-up meet-

ings are planned to focus in moredetail on promising areas, accord-ing to Jeffrey Brancato, actingdirector of the Columbia Nan-otechnology Initiative.

Columbia is one of six majorresearch universities in the UnitedStates that have been designatedby the National Science Founda-tion as national nanoscale researchcenters. The University receivedan initial U.S. government grant of$10.8 million to support the workof 16 primary researchers for fiveyears in the Center for ElectronicTransport in Molecular Nanostruc-tures. Professors Ronald Breslow,the National Medal of Sciencewinner, and Horst Stormer, aNobel Prize winner in physics, arescientific directors of the center.

More than 50 researchers Uni-versity-wide are engaged innanoscale research, includingthose at Columbia’s Fu Founda-tion School of Engineering andApplied Science, the Health Sci-ences Division and within diversedepartments, such as chemistryand physics. Research involvesthe simulation of biological andinorganic materials; the synthesisand characterization of nanocrys-tals, nanotubes, and low-dimen-sional structures, and the fabrica-tion of small, functional biologicalmachines that detect and movematter through a variety of micro-scopic methods.

—Suzanne Trimel

New Nanotechnology InitiativeLaunched with Province of Québec

BY SUZANNE TRIMEL