Island nations could be forgiven for feeling slighted. They already face the brunt of the effects of climate change: Rising sea levels, dwindling resources, threats to infrastructure and economic foundations. But to add insult to injury, thousands of these islands are too small to be accounted for in the global climate models (GCMs) used by scientists to measure the effects of climate change.Ěý
In a new study published in the journalĚýNature Climate Change, a new way of modeling the effects of climate change on islands shows that previous analyses underestimated the number of islands that would become substantially more arid by mid centuryâ73 percent, up from an estimate of 50 percent. That leaves the population of those islandsâapproximately 18 million peopleâin the position of being what CIRES Fellow Kris Karnauskas, the paper's lead author, and his coauthors refer to as âcomputationally disenfranchised.â
It also means that whatâs known about the effects of climate change on islandsâ freshwater systems may have been woefully incomplete. GCMs show 50 percent of all small islands becoming wetter and 50 percent becoming drier, as far as rainfall goes. But those models by themselves don't take into account what happens on these unaccounted-for islands and, in fact, Karnauskas and his coauthors found that 73 percent of islands will actually become more dry as a result of increased evaporation.Ěý
âIslands are already dealing with sea level rise,â says Karnauskas, also a professor of atmospheric and oceanic sciences at the University of Colorado Boulder. âBut this shows that any rainwater they have is also vulnerable. The atmosphere is getting thirstier, and would like more of that freshwater back.â
The problem stems from the fact that GCMs arenât all that fine-grained. These models divide the planet into a grid and each grid box is approximately 240 km by 210 km. Thatâs a pretty big space and if thereâs a tiny islandâor even an island chain like French Polynesiaâalone in one of those grid boxes, it makes it impractical to include them in the model.Ěý
âThink of pixels,â says Karnauskas. âIf theyâre too big to resolve the freckles on someoneâs nose, you wonât be able to see those freckles. You have to have super fine pixels to resolve it, and frankly thatâs not what global climate models were designed to do.â
The âpixelsâ of the GCMs are too big and scientists donât have the computer resources yet to do something on a more refined scale. Take, for example, an island like Easter Island, which isĚý3,512 kilometresĚýoff the coast of Chile in the South Pacific. Easter Island is small and itâs the only spot of land in its GCM grid box. Essentially, itâs a freckle and the GCM canât get down to that level of detail. So, in the current GCMs, Easter Island doesnât existâthat whole grid square is just considered open ocean.
Thatâs the case with islands all over the globe and itâs a real problem when it comes to knowing what climate change will do to islandsâ freshwater supplies. Unlike continents or larger islands, the effects of climate change on freshwater for these smaller, isolated islands arenât being calculated.Ěý
Paper after paper in my field show changes in drought or aridity,â says Karnauskas. âBut my eye always looks at the maps and graphs in those papers and I wonder why we can't see islands. Using models, it turns out, is much less straightforward for islands than for places where there are big chunks of land.â
To understand how climate change will affect freshwater, scientists have to understand whatâs happening with precipitationĚýandĚýevaporation. The first part is easier: Current GCMs can tell you all about precipitation over land or over the ocean. Even in a grid square like the one thatâs home to Easter Island, they can estimate how much precipitation is likely falling from the sky.
But evaporation is another matter. When it comes to those same small islands, the models donât show how much water is evaporating because those islands donât exist in the modelsâitâs all ocean there. Nor can it be calculated using the amount evaporating off the ocean, as ocean evaporation follows different physical principles than water evaporating off land. Without knowing how much water is evaporating off these islands, thereâs been no way to know exactly how the freshwater supplies are being affected. So Karnauskas and his former colleagues from the Woods Hole Institute in Massachusetts developed a way to get the information needed to know whatâs happening on islands.
Karnauskas draws a diagram of a cube on a white board. âThis is a 3-D picture of an ocean grid cell,â he explains. âSay thereâs an island in here. The climate model doesnât have the island but letâs go to the location where thereĚýoughtĚýto be an island and use the information on the model atmosphere from directly over that cell.âĚý
Essentially, theyâre looking at the climateĚýaboveĚýthe surface of the island to make an approximation of the islandâs actual climate. They can do this because many of the islands are so small that climate above the island isnât much different from climate above the ocean, especially averaged over a day or longer. Thatâs been verified even on islands as large as Maui, where data from weather stations at airports shows surprisingly little difference from data from weather stations moored hundreds of kilometers offshore.
âWe called it the blind pig test,â explains Karnauskas with a grin. âIf you were a blind pig flying in this area, would you know there was an island here? Could you feel a difference in the heat or the humidity?âĚý
A âsuccessfulâ blind pig test means you canât tell if youâre over land or over ocean. If thatâs the case, scientists donât need to know anything from the land itself to predict evaporation; they just need to know whatâs happening in the atmosphere right near the surface. From that information, and some tools borrowed from the engineering field, they can glean how much water is evaporating and, thus, get a more accurate picture of the ratio of precipitation to evaporation in a particular area.
Karnauskas sees this work as extremely important, both for understanding climate change in these regions and in considering human health and safety. A vast majority of the people living on these remote island rely on rainwater as the source of their drinking water. And for those that already have health issues due to water quality, increased pressure on freshwater systems will only exacerbate the problem. Already someone from the Cook Islands, an archipelago in the South Pacific Ocean, saw mention of his research online and reached out for more details.Ěý
âThereâs an opportunity to get important information out there,â Karnauskas says. âThis is a framework to provide more accurate information on what to expect.â
Contact:
°°ůžą˛őĚý°˛š°ů˛Ô˛šłÜ˛ő°ě˛š˛ő,Ěý303-735-4395
kristopher.karnauskas@colorado.edu
LauraĚýKrantz, CIRES communications,Ěý303-492-1790
laura.krantz@colorado.edu
KatyĚýHuman, CIRES communications,Ěý303-735-0196Ěý
kathleen.human@colorado.edu