PERMAQUA: permafrost and its impacts on water resources and water ecology in high mountain areas

Permafrost has become an important issue in the European Alps. In South Tyrol (Italy), the area of permafrost covers about 440 km2, and in the Austrian Alps about 2000 km2. Active rock glaciers are a common feature of high mountain permafrost and due to their location near the lower boundary of perm...

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Main Authors: Tolotti, Monica, Albers, R., Krainer, K., Lang, K., Lösch, B., Mair, V., Nickus, U., Schiestl, E. M., Schmidt, V., Tait, D., Tessadri, R., Thaler, B., Thies, H., Tonidandel, D.
Other Authors: Tolotti, M., Schiestl, E.M.
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Ice
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10449/21708
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spelling ftiasma:oai:openpub.fmach.it:10449/21708 2024-01-28T10:06:24+01:00 PERMAQUA: permafrost and its impacts on water resources and water ecology in high mountain areas Tolotti, Monica Albers, R. Krainer, K. Lang, K. Lösch, B. Mair, V. Nickus, U. Schiestl, E. M. Schmidt, V. Tait, D. Tessadri, R. Thaler, B. Thies, H. Tonidandel, D. Tolotti, M. Albers, R. Krainer, K. Lang, K. Lösch, B. Mair, V. Nickus, U. Schiestl, E.M. Schmidt, V. Tait, D. Tessadri, R. Thaler, B. Thies, H. Tonidandel, D. 2013 http://hdl.handle.net/10449/21708 eng eng ispartofbook:MUW13 Mountains Under Watch: observing climate change effects in the Alps: Colle di Bard, Aosta Valley, 20-21 February 2013 MUW13 Mountains Under Watch firstpage:133 http://hdl.handle.net/10449/21708 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Settore BIO/07 - ECOLOGIA info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject 2013 ftiasma 2024-01-02T23:25:01Z Permafrost has become an important issue in the European Alps. In South Tyrol (Italy), the area of permafrost covers about 440 km2, and in the Austrian Alps about 2000 km2. Active rock glaciers are a common feature of high mountain permafrost and due to their location near the lower boundary of permafrost, their mean annual surface temperature is close to melting conditions (Haeberli et al., 2006), which indicates their particular sensitivity to climate warming. Air temperature in the Alps has substantially increased during the past decades and climate warming is projected to become even more pronounced until the end of the 21th century. Increasing instability of slopes, landslides and floods, as well as alterations in the hydrological regime can be anticipated. Up to now, studies on the effects of active rock glaciers on hydrology and water chemistry of adjacent surface waters are still rare (e.g. Williams et al., 2006; Krainer et al., 2007; Thies et al., 2007; Baron et al., 2009). Results from the previous EU-RTD project EUROLIMPACS and the Interreg IV-Alpine Space project PermaNET showed that waters draining from active rock glaciers may contain high concentrations of solutes and at some sites also metals (e.g. nickel, aluminium), which can exceed the limit for drinking water by far. The origin of these metals is yet unresolved. Potential effects of solutes and metals on the ecology and on freshwater biota in high mountain lakes and streams in the Alps are still unknown. The current PERMAQUA project (Interreg IV Italy-Austria, European Regional Development Fund) combines studies on geology, hydrology, contemporary aquatic chemistry and freshwater biota, the analysis of lake sediment cores, peat cores and rock glacier ice cores near selected rock glaciers in South Tyrol (Italy) and North Tyrol (Austria). The PERMAQUA project aims to assess the impact of permafrost melt on high mountain freshwaters. The state-of-the-art knowledge about potential ecological impacts of permafrost melt and its consequence for man ... Conference Object Ice permafrost Fondazione Edmund Mach: IRIS-OpenPub
institution Open Polar
collection Fondazione Edmund Mach: IRIS-OpenPub
op_collection_id ftiasma
language English
topic Settore BIO/07 - ECOLOGIA
spellingShingle Settore BIO/07 - ECOLOGIA
Tolotti, Monica
Albers, R.
Krainer, K.
Lang, K.
Lösch, B.
Mair, V.
Nickus, U.
Schiestl, E. M.
Schmidt, V.
Tait, D.
Tessadri, R.
Thaler, B.
Thies, H.
Tonidandel, D.
PERMAQUA: permafrost and its impacts on water resources and water ecology in high mountain areas
topic_facet Settore BIO/07 - ECOLOGIA
description Permafrost has become an important issue in the European Alps. In South Tyrol (Italy), the area of permafrost covers about 440 km2, and in the Austrian Alps about 2000 km2. Active rock glaciers are a common feature of high mountain permafrost and due to their location near the lower boundary of permafrost, their mean annual surface temperature is close to melting conditions (Haeberli et al., 2006), which indicates their particular sensitivity to climate warming. Air temperature in the Alps has substantially increased during the past decades and climate warming is projected to become even more pronounced until the end of the 21th century. Increasing instability of slopes, landslides and floods, as well as alterations in the hydrological regime can be anticipated. Up to now, studies on the effects of active rock glaciers on hydrology and water chemistry of adjacent surface waters are still rare (e.g. Williams et al., 2006; Krainer et al., 2007; Thies et al., 2007; Baron et al., 2009). Results from the previous EU-RTD project EUROLIMPACS and the Interreg IV-Alpine Space project PermaNET showed that waters draining from active rock glaciers may contain high concentrations of solutes and at some sites also metals (e.g. nickel, aluminium), which can exceed the limit for drinking water by far. The origin of these metals is yet unresolved. Potential effects of solutes and metals on the ecology and on freshwater biota in high mountain lakes and streams in the Alps are still unknown. The current PERMAQUA project (Interreg IV Italy-Austria, European Regional Development Fund) combines studies on geology, hydrology, contemporary aquatic chemistry and freshwater biota, the analysis of lake sediment cores, peat cores and rock glacier ice cores near selected rock glaciers in South Tyrol (Italy) and North Tyrol (Austria). The PERMAQUA project aims to assess the impact of permafrost melt on high mountain freshwaters. The state-of-the-art knowledge about potential ecological impacts of permafrost melt and its consequence for man ...
author2 Tolotti, M.
Albers, R.
Krainer, K.
Lang, K.
Lösch, B.
Mair, V.
Nickus, U.
Schiestl, E.M.
Schmidt, V.
Tait, D.
Tessadri, R.
Thaler, B.
Thies, H.
Tonidandel, D.
format Conference Object
author Tolotti, Monica
Albers, R.
Krainer, K.
Lang, K.
Lösch, B.
Mair, V.
Nickus, U.
Schiestl, E. M.
Schmidt, V.
Tait, D.
Tessadri, R.
Thaler, B.
Thies, H.
Tonidandel, D.
author_facet Tolotti, Monica
Albers, R.
Krainer, K.
Lang, K.
Lösch, B.
Mair, V.
Nickus, U.
Schiestl, E. M.
Schmidt, V.
Tait, D.
Tessadri, R.
Thaler, B.
Thies, H.
Tonidandel, D.
author_sort Tolotti, Monica
title PERMAQUA: permafrost and its impacts on water resources and water ecology in high mountain areas
title_short PERMAQUA: permafrost and its impacts on water resources and water ecology in high mountain areas
title_full PERMAQUA: permafrost and its impacts on water resources and water ecology in high mountain areas
title_fullStr PERMAQUA: permafrost and its impacts on water resources and water ecology in high mountain areas
title_full_unstemmed PERMAQUA: permafrost and its impacts on water resources and water ecology in high mountain areas
title_sort permaqua: permafrost and its impacts on water resources and water ecology in high mountain areas
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10449/21708
genre Ice
permafrost
genre_facet Ice
permafrost
op_relation ispartofbook:MUW13 Mountains Under Watch: observing climate change effects in the Alps: Colle di Bard, Aosta Valley, 20-21 February 2013
MUW13 Mountains Under Watch
firstpage:133
http://hdl.handle.net/10449/21708
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
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