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Dust covers Tehran on July 6. Government officials closed state offices, schools, and military bases for two days and raised the pollution alert status due to the dust.

(Morteza Nikoubazl/Reuters)

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Tiny particles with a huge environmental impact

Human activity in deserts is causing more dust to settle on alpine meadows and mountains, speeding snow melt.

By Robert C. Cowen  |  Columnist/ July 10, 2009 edition

Dust is a conundrum for climate scientists. No sooner do they think they’re getting a handle on its environmental impact than researchers discover more of its unexpected tricks.

Every year, dust blows up from deserts to cover high alpine meadows in mountains. The dust burden in these mountains now is five times greater than it was before the mid-19th century. That’s mainly because of increased human activity in desert areas, according to a joint announcement of research from the University of Utah and Colorado State University. This heat-absorbing dust makes the mountain snow pack melt earlier than it used to.

Utah’s Tom Painter noted that scientists already know that “earlier snowmelt by desert dust depletes the natural water reservoirs of mountain snow pacts and in turn affects the delivery of water to urban and agricultural areas.” Now experiments he carried out with Colorado’s Heidi Steltzer and colleagues show that the earlier snow melt timing may have a subtle yet potentially profound effect on the ecology of the high meadows. It encourages the alpine plants to synchronize their growth cycles instead of flowering at different times during the growing season. Dr. Steltzer says that this “synchronized growth was unexpected and may have adverse effects on plants, water quality, and wildlife” in ways not yet fully understood.

A tendency of plants to grow and bloom in lockstep would lead to a feast-and-famine ecology for both plants and animals, rather than one with resources distributed throughout the growing season. While this result is independent of global warming, such warming would enhance it. Steltzer explains that “with increasing dust deposition from drying and warming in the deserts under global warming, the composition of alpine meadows could change as some species increase in abundance, while others are lost, possibly forever.”

Then there’s the unexpected chemistry of soot. Scientists know that carbon-black particles, which soak up heat, are second only to CO2 as a driver of global warming. They also know that sulfate and nitrate particles, such as those spewed from volcanoes, reflect sunlight and cool the atmosphere. So some scientists have suggested artificially injecting such particles into the air to try to curb global warming.

Kimberly Prather at the University of California at San Diego and Ryan Moffet, who worked with her as a graduate student, don’t think that’s a good idea. They have carried out what Professor Prather calls “the first direct measurements of the optical properties of atmospheric soot.” These data from air over Mexico City and Riverside, Calif., show that chemicals such as sulfate or nitrate react rapidly with soot particles. They quickly form a spherical shell on each particle that focuses sunlight. Instead of having a cooling effect, the sulfate enhances soot’s heat-trapping ability by 60 percent. A completely unexpected result.

Details of these two studies, published in late June by the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences online, show how tricky it is for scientists to assess the environmental effects of airborne particles. Dust on your desk is a nuisance, but you can clean it up. Dust in the atmosphere is more than a nuisance: It is a major – and poorly understood – player in 21st-century environmental change.

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Comments

1. Carolyn Hopper | 07.10.09

This article will be most helpful for those of us involved in working to reduce off road travel in dry western states. In particular Utah where there is the belief by some that anyone should be able to drive across any public land anytime. This crushes cryptobiotic soil which allows the sand it contains to blow away - away toward the mountains in Colorado. Anyone depending on water
from the mountains should protest any action in any state that contributes to the increase in sand particles in the air as well as the loss of natural life when the soils which support it are gone.

2. Rick Gunter | 07.10.09

I wonder how much money Al Gore will make off this bit of information? I can see the power point presentation now, “The World Ruined By Dust!” Soon we will all have to run around with little spray bottles to wet down our foot prints so we don’t stir up too much dust.

3. Daniel Fram | 07.10.09

Is it not amazing, the writer of this story must have never left the city in their lives. You could drive all of the SUV’s in North America through the desert for a year, and it would not kick up 1/10000000 of the of the dust that is raised in 1 second of a wind storm in southern Nevada. The foolishness of the people who buy into this stuff is beyond imagination.

4. Richard Gorman | 07.11.09

Thanks for keeping us informed about the wide variety of environmental impacts, especially in the face of the large number of negative comments. It is always encouraging to see journalism in the pursuit of truth.

5. Joe Woodelf | 07.13.09

Daniel Fram makes an important point. However, he uses the age-old excuse of since nature does it, it is okay for us to screw things up even more. Daniel misses two (maybe more) very important facts. First, our deserts kick up more dust now due to off road vehicle travel as they lose vegetation and the hardened surface, both of which existed in natural conditions in some area of this country’s deserts (and the world’s) but have been compromised by unwitting abuse. The second point is that those wind storms don’t drop dust all over the high mountains of the whole of the west as do off road vehicles. As someone who has spent my free time in the mountains for more years than I care to count, I can take you to a whole lot of places and show you dust/dirt on the snow that is a direct result of the ever increasing use of vehicles, especially off road, in the mountains. The inter-connectivity of our actions and impacts is pretty significant.

6. Todd Herzer | 07.17.09

We experienced this condition in our part of the Rockies this spring. At first we were delighted with the late spring snow falls which seemed ensure a prolonged snow pack, but alas an odd pinkish hue started showing up on the peaks above timberline. It turned out to be dust which accelerated the snow melt. High Country News magazine wrote a detailed piece about this emerging problem: http://www.hcn.org/issues/323/16326

7. Toochewed | 07.19.09

The price of food leads me to believe that the warming and magnifications of UV rays are becoming more and more detrimental to crop yields … and us .

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