Spectral characterization, radiative forcing and pigment content of coastal Antarctic snow algae: approaches to spectrally discriminate red and green communities and their impact on snowmelt
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Published:2021-01-13
Issue:1
Volume:15
Page:133-148
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ISSN:1994-0424
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Container-title:The Cryosphere
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language:en
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Short-container-title:The Cryosphere
Author:
Khan Alia L.ORCID, Dierssen Heidi M., Scambos Ted A.ORCID, Höfer JuanORCID, Cordero Raul R.ORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Here, we present radiative forcing (RF) estimates by snow
algae in the Antarctic Peninsula (AP) region from multi-year measurements of
solar radiation and ground-based hyperspectral characterization of red and
green snow algae collected during a brief field expedition in austral summer 2018. Our analysis includes pigment content from samples at three bloom
sites. Algal biomass in the snow and albedo reduction are well-correlated
across the visible spectrum. Relative to clean snow, visibly green patches
reduce snow albedo by ∼40 % and red patches by
∼20 %. However, red communities absorb considerably more
light per milligram of pigment compared to green communities, particularly in green
wavelengths. Based on our study results, it should be possible to
differentiate red and green algae using Sentinel-2 bands in blue, green and
red wavelengths. Instantaneous RF averages were double for green (180 W m−2) vs. red communities (88 W m−2), with a maximum of 228 W m−2. Based on multi-year solar radiation measurements at Palmer
Station, this translated to a mean daily RF of ∼26 W m−2
(green) and ∼13 W m−2 (red) during peak growing season
– on par with midlatitude dust attributions capable of advancing snowmelt.
This results in ∼2522 m3 of snow melted by
green-colored algae and ∼1218 m3 of snow melted by
red-colored algae annually over the summer, suggesting snow algae play a
significant role in snowmelt in the AP regions where they occur. We suggest
impacts of RF by snow algae on snowmelt be accounted for in future estimates
of Antarctic ice-free expansion in the AP region.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Water Science and Technology
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