How Climate Change Disrupts the Water Cycle via the Hydro-logical System Express Cause and Effect
“It seems to me that the natural world is the greatest
source of excitement; the greatest source of visual beauty, the greatest source
of intellectual interest. It is the greatest source of so much in life that
makes life worth living….You realize you are not immortal; you are not a god;
you are part of the natural world and you come to accept that.”
Sir David Attenborough
As the huge cumulonimbus clouds rise along the horizon,
there is also rising concern about rising climate temperatures, but have you
thought that the primary disruption is happening with the water cycle? This complex integrated system has many
parts and functions linked interdependently; if one part is un-linked, then all the other
parts can be derailed.
Therefore, let’s use a concrete metaphor to show the cause
and effect of climate change on the water cycle in the form of a large train
with linked boxcars and call it the Hydro-logical System Express. It moves through the Earth’s Ecosystems where
all moving parts are connected for Nature’s essential synergy within the
Earth’s Biosphere. As you can quickly
see, this road map is much more than a friendly springtime shower.
Water moves around the Earth in a water cycle with
immemorial, basic mechanics: evaporation, condensation, precipitation,
infiltration and surface run-off. Along the way, it affects water supplies, food
webs, health, sanitation, and energy production.
Imagine, this natural process is now steaming through a time
of Climate Change with huge possible interference by affecting the amount,
distribution and quality of available water. In turn, communities, industries and
ecosystems can also be impacted, directly or indirectly.
Here is the Nature's scientific engineering fact: hotter climate causes more water to evaporate
from land and ocean water. This also means greater plant transpiration which
results in water loss in soil and plants.
Imagine there are five boxcars linked to the water cycle that show
cause and effect:
ONE: A warmer
atmosphere can hold more water moisture; roughly four percent more water for
every 1 degree rise in temperature. One
result is increased precipitation and runoff, leading to flooding. Another
result, depending on geography, is less precipitation and longer drought
periods.
TWO: Mountain
melt water and runoff provide more than 50 percent of the world’s freshwater.
Therefore, as global temperatures rise, mountain glaciers and snow packs are
melting at an unprecedented rate creating greater water stress in the habitats.
Just think, glaciers can’t be replaced once they’re gone.
THREE: Valuable groundwater levels will be affected along
with accelerated water competition and stress at the surface about its proper
use without overusing this limited resource. Water quality will decline within
the ecosystems as well. For example, higher water temperatures in lakes,
streams and reservoirs result in lower levels of dissolved oxygen which adds more
stress on the fish, insects, microorganisms and other aquatic animals that rely
on oxygen.
FOUR: More precipitation will cause a greater pollution load to be washed into our
waterways, such as nitrogen from agriculture, pesticides, herbicides and even
disease pathogens. It’s simply another engineering cycle that all water will return eventually to the coastal ocean
waters. This can create blooms of harmful algae and bacteria such as blue-green
algae or red tide which, in turn, can damage aquatic life and produce dangerous toxins for humans and other
animals to touch or drink; thereby, hurting the fisheries, shellfish and tourism economies. A new reality called ocean acidification will need further
study.
FIVE: As oceans become warmer along with an increased melt
from ice caps and glaciers, the sea
levels will rise. This will drive saltwater into freshwater aquifers affecting
the drinking supply as well as irrigation. These threats to fragile coastal communities
are alarming as infrastructure and economies try to cope for a roughly estimated
more than 200 million people worldwide who live along coastlines less than 5
meters above sea level; a number that could reach 400 to 500 million by the end
of the 21st century.
Of course, the picture of a Hydro-logical System Express throttling through
our land is a caricature oversimplification. There are far greater dimensions and confluences to the survival of the planet itself based on the variable living Ecosystems
which aggregate to make the Earth’s Biosphere.
Each ecosystem has its own energy cycle which contains all
of the living species and all non-living elements in any particular
environment, whether as a single tree, a forest or even a puddle. This energy flows from the sun through
plants, food producers, consumers, microorganisms,
and animals which ends with decomposition in order to recycle the process
again. Climate change may force habitat
relocation and upset the food chain or contribute to species extinction. It
will affect human land development, agriculture, erosion, flooding, droughts,
or greater wildfires.
Still larger, the all-embracing and cohesive mother of all,
is the Biosphere based on water, air and minerals found on land where all life
exists below ground, above ground and at least 200 meters of the ocean and
seas. Energy flow is essential to maintain the structure of organisms by the
splitting of phosphate bonds. As levels of greenhouse gases increase, including more water vapor, the Earth
responds with higher temperatures. As the Biosphere’s temperature increases, it
becomes global warming versus climate change which is more localized long-term
pattern changes in weather conditions.
There are arguments as to which degree human activity is
responsible for climate change affecting the causes and effects of the water cycle. But there is
no argument that such a wide range of human activities depend, directly or
indirectly, on water and that future climate-driven changes in water resources
will affect many aspects of our lives.
So next time you look up at some lazy cloud passing by on a
warmer day than usual, or a tumult of clouds building along the horizon, please
visualize the all-powerful water cycle connecting all possible links to
precipitation, run-offs, surface water, pollution, ocean levels, ecosystems, communities
and so much more within the vastness of this blue planet’s Biosphere.
Then, see yourself as one individual who needs to do your part which is morally right and
responsible to keep
your water in your space to be as pure and fresh as possible to make all life possible.
Questions and comments are always welcome and appreciated to further this discussion. What are some of your questions or experiences with water or lack of?
Sincerely,
Annemarie Berukoff
amarie10@gmail.com
PS: It gives me great
pride to be the author of a special e-book for children of all ages called The Incredible Journey of a
Water Sprite with Roots on his Mission to Discover Cyclical Truths …
Read more about the introduction of how and why this story was written:
Read more about the Most Common Question Asked about the Incredible Journey of
The Water Sprite with Plant Roots with a Table of Contents
It can be downloaded here:
Excerpt: My thoughts wander about the kind of ecology that
humankinds believe in, as I have witnessed. Do they get it that natural life
begins with DNA in a nucleus, one celled animals and plants, then species and
then an ecosystem? Do they know that every small ecosystem is part of the total
large biosphere on Earth that connects them all; water, air, food, resources,
and shelter? Do they realize that perpetual growth, industry or destruction of
any habitat is not sustainable on a limited planet?
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