The China Mail - Identity crisis: Climate destroying wonders that gave US parks their names

USD -
AED 3.672501
AFN 63.493369
ALL 83.065121
AMD 368.061373
ANG 1.790403
AOA 917.503082
ARS 1479.268799
AUD 1.450705
AWG 1.80125
AZN 1.704306
BAM 1.724631
BBD 2.015008
BDT 123.052911
BGN 1.69088
BHD 0.377235
BIF 2981.376318
BMD 1
BND 1.298014
BOB 6.913275
BRL 5.202301
BSD 1.000494
BTN 94.394378
BWP 13.651955
BYN 2.847191
BYR 19600
BZD 2.012169
CAD 1.42401
CDF 2269.000106
CHF 0.813199
CLF 0.023389
CLP 920.249899
CNY 6.7905
CNH 6.80507
COP 3440.62
CRC 455.363127
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 97.231163
CZK 21.38355
DJF 178.15793
DKK 6.59032
DOP 58.957356
DZD 133.564019
EGP 49.534796
ERN 15
ETB 157.79172
EUR 0.88172
FJD 2.244203
FKP 0.75995
GBP 0.759865
GEL 2.640163
GGP 0.75995
GHS 11.25259
GIP 0.75995
GMD 72.510374
GNF 8766.88653
GTQ 7.632888
GYD 209.329395
HKD 7.840575
HNL 26.770661
HRK 6.645899
HTG 130.762583
HUF 313.477965
IDR 17982
ILS 2.975899
IMP 0.75995
INR 94.38045
IQD 1310.623964
IRR 1375050.000123
ISK 126.960185
JEP 0.75995
JMD 157.684032
JOD 0.708978
JPY 161.850226
KES 129.59298
KGS 87.450161
KHR 4028.922887
KMF 433.999516
KPW 900.00035
KRW 1542.979919
KWD 0.30971
KYD 0.833737
KZT 484.885895
LAK 22235.351175
LBP 89595.167762
LKR 337.175056
LRD 182.081919
LSL 16.568199
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 6.424817
MAD 9.418715
MDL 17.758476
MGA 4265.244037
MKD 54.366184
MMK 2099.534862
MNT 3583.823146
MOP 8.07945
MRU 39.739339
MUR 48.190398
MVR 15.449729
MWK 1734.844143
MXN 17.638795
MYR 4.117302
MZN 63.909585
NAD 16.568199
NGN 1379.810012
NIO 36.814468
NOK 9.891199
NPR 151.027498
NZD 1.773553
OMR 0.384501
PAB 1.000485
PEN 3.423701
PGK 4.390498
PHP 61.322498
PKR 278.431272
PLN 3.78022
PYG 6113.48706
QAR 3.646841
RON 4.613097
RSD 103.466046
RUB 75.497985
RWF 1470.217363
SAR 3.75631
SBD 8.051953
SCR 14.057553
SDG 600.000277
SEK 9.75957
SGD 1.297675
SHP 0.746601
SLE 24.792558
SLL 20969.503664
SOS 571.756095
SRD 37.459846
STD 20697.981008
STN 21.604176
SVC 8.754541
SYP 110.532098
SZL 16.56607
THB 33.402522
TJS 9.249239
TMT 3.5
TND 2.970618
TOP 2.40776
TRY 46.51525
TTD 6.795175
TWD 31.850502
TZS 2618.939032
UAH 44.986949
UGX 3701.80946
UYU 40.139678
UZS 12018.0946
VES 620.752985
VND 26320
VUV 119.820737
WST 2.777776
XAF 578.419823
XAG 0.017474
XAU 0.000251
XCD 2.70255
XCG 1.803071
XDR 0.718004
XOF 578.424923
XPF 105.161521
YER 238.625026
ZAR 16.561795
ZMK 9001.203975
ZMW 18.058287
ZWL 321.999592
  • BCC

    2.4450

    80.105

    +3.05%

  • GSK

    1.2300

    52.32

    +2.35%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1600

    18

    -0.89%

  • CMSC

    -0.0050

    22.06

    -0.02%

  • BCE

    -0.0650

    23.135

    -0.28%

  • RIO

    1.0700

    95.1

    +1.13%

  • AZN

    3.0750

    186.095

    +1.65%

  • BTI

    0.8900

    62.28

    +1.43%

  • CMSD

    -0.1400

    21.88

    -0.64%

  • JRI

    0.1050

    12.675

    +0.83%

  • VOD

    0.0350

    13.845

    +0.25%

  • NGG

    1.0750

    83.905

    +1.28%

  • RELX

    0.3700

    31.52

    +1.17%

  • BP

    0.1100

    37.97

    +0.29%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    61.3

    0%

Identity crisis: Climate destroying wonders that gave US parks their names
Identity crisis: Climate destroying wonders that gave US parks their names / Photo: © AFP

Identity crisis: Climate destroying wonders that gave US parks their names

Glacier National Park's ice fortress is crumbling. The giant trees of Sequoia National Park are ablaze. And even the tenacious cacti of Saguaro National Park are struggling to endure a decades-long drought.

Text size:

Since their creation, national parks have embodied the pioneering spirit of America in their vast expanses and breathtaking landscapes.

But today, the climate crisis imperils the very symbols of many parks, leaving them facing a future where their names could be cruel ironies.

Deep within Montana's Glacier National Park, the once majestic Grinnell Glacier is now greatly diminished.

After a grueling trek, visitors are met with a stunning sight: a serene lake of pale blue water, nestled among towering peaks.

But as beautiful as it is, the very presence of this lake is testament to the ravages of a fast-warming planet.

Just a few decades ago, this landscape was entirely frozen.

Now the glacier itself is relegated to a small hollow, sheltered from the Sun, at the edge of the lake created through its own melting.

As he straps on his crampons, student Ryan Bergman marvels at what still remains of the ice body.

"I want to know that this stuff is here for years to come," says the 22-year-old, who has embarked on a two-month journey to explore a dozen parks.

He dreams of one day returning with his own children to see the same sights.

But time is running out.

The park has already lost 60 percent of its namesake glaciers since the 1850s, and scientists predict their complete disappearance by century's end.

- Philosophical shift -

Families from all over America and abroad flock to these natural wonders to create memories that will last.

Conserving the nation's 63 national parks is a rare point of political convergence in a sharply divided country. With tens of millions of visitors to these sites every year, it's also an economic imperative.

President Joe Biden's government recently announced nearly $200 million to help them adapt -- funding made available through his signature climate law.

Yet despite these efforts, the reality is that not everything can be saved.

This sobering truth has sparked an identity crisis for the federal agency charged with their protection, the National Park Service (NPS).

It was brought into existence by a 1916 law that called to preserve these treasured sites "unimpaired for the enjoyment of future generations."

But it's now "pretty clear that it's not achievable in many places," admits John Gross, an ecologist with the NPS climate change response program.

"It's certainly possible that the parks could lose the iconic feature for which they've been named."

The climate crisis has thus brought about a profound shift in the organization's philosophy: It's no longer taboo to modify a park's natural state to stem further degradation.

- Chopper rides for bull trout -

Where battles have already been lost, strategic interventions are now underway to try to win the war.

On the shores of Glacier's Lake McDonald, Chris Downs, the park's head of aquatic resources, shares the story of the massive effort it took to rescue the beleaguered bull trout.

The fish is a native species threatened by warming waters, which are driven in part by reduced ice melt in later summer.

It is also facing competition from non-native lake trout, which were introduced for fishing and are better suited to the changing conditions.

Fifty years ago, bull trout outnumbered their invasive counterparts by a five-to-one margin. Today, the situation is reversed.

In 2014, a decision was made to relocate the native species to cooler, upstream waters where they had never previously been found.

Downs recalls workers transporting dozens of fish in backpacks filled with ice packs, with thousands more from fish farms slated to be whisked away to their new habitats via helicopter.

"They're growing really well" in their new home, says the biologist.

Critics call it a manipulation of nature. Downs calls it a "necessity."

Also as a result of climate change, the park ia conducting DNA testing of threatened whitebark pines, identifying those most resilient to drought for planting at targeted locations as part of a restoration plan.

- Rebuilding beaches -

A 2018 study revealed national parks are warming at twice the rate of the rest of the country, because they are mainly located in climate-sensitive regions like mountain ranges or in Alaska, near the North Pole.

"We're already seeing transformational impacts of anthropogenic climate change throughout parks right now," warns Gross.

At Indiana Dunes National Park, beaches are submerged, and the eponymous dunes are collapsing.

This time, park workers are fighting back.

Every year, they fill in a damaged site along the southern shore of Lake Michigan, where the park's unique biodiversity thrives amid surrounding steel mills and a coal-fired power station.

On a day in November, the battle against erosion is symbolized by the comings and goings of two large excavator trucks.

Some 80,000 tons of sand, excavated from a quarry, are used to replenish the beach at the foot of the most famous dune in the park: Mount Baldy, a popular summer spot for vacationing tourists from Chicago.

As Thomas Kanies, project manager for the Army Corps of Engineers, explains: "The goal is always to keep the beach at what it always has been" -- and doing so will also preserve the dunes behind the beach.

The proximity to Michigan City's industrial port is the main culprit for erosion, Kanies said, because the pier blocks the flow of sand along the coast.

While the situation was once manageable, climate change "is changing the game completely," says NPS geologist Erin Argyilan.

- Harsh tradeoffs -

The ice shelf that forms in winter "has been kind of our first line of defense to protect the dunes from the high waves that naturally come with fall and winter storms," Argyilan explains.

But with climate change, the ice isn't coming until at least December if not January, while the storms begin in late October.

Compounding the issue are warmer lakes, which fuel more intense storms, and increasingly severe rainwater runoff.

Another phenomenon that Argyilan is studying: a faster freeze-thaw cycle on the sands, which is causing dune segments to collapse.

"Our goal is to minimize the impact as much as possible," says Argyilan, while acknowledging that beach nourishment amounts to a "Band-Aid."

More drastic measures have also been attempted.

Lake Michigan, which has a natural 30-year cycle of fluctuations, hit a recent water level peak in 2020, amplifying the effects of violent storms.

Houses in one of the villages adjacent to the park threatened to collapse, and residents erected massive rock blocks on the beach to shield them from erosion.

This solution however sparked controversy as the obstacles worsened the degradation of dunes further along the shore.

As Betsy Maher, executive director of the group Save the Dunes, puts it: "We can't destroy the beach for the sake of a few homes."

The dilemma encapsulates the harsh tradeoff that is at times imposed by climate change: preserve the natural world, or prioritize humans?

- A Sisyphean task -

At Saguaro National Park in Arizona, home to the largest concentration of iconic saguaro cacti in the country, approximately two million of the towering desert plants cluster together like a forest, their arms outstretched towards the sky.

To the untrained eye, they appear to be thriving.

However, these resilient cacti that evolved to cope with ultra-arid environments are facing hidden threats as a result of a drought that began around 30 years ago.

In 2020 and again last year, the region experienced unusually meager rainfall in the summer, typically a time of monsoon rains.

During this period, a non-native plant, buffelgrass, began to colonize the park. This invasive weed, introduced from Africa as livestock fodder, fuels fires that have ravaged saguaros in the past, as in 1994 and 1999.

The species, which covers the mountainsides in straw-yellow clumps, "is very dry for much of the year, and it can ignite quickly and quite easily," says park biologist Frankie Foley.

Volunteers gather every weekend under Foley's direction to take on the invaders, pulling them from the ground by hand. Armed with pickaxes, they dig tirelessly, facing a daunting task given the park's vastness.

- Next generation imperiled -

The drought has become so intense that saguaros are also struggling to ensure the future of the species.

Young saguaros, which grow slowly, are particularly vulnerable due to their limited water storage capacity. By age 15, they are a mere six inches (10 centimeters) in height, making them highly susceptible to drought conditions.

As a result, "since the mid-1990s, we haven't had very many young saguaros surviving at all," says Don Swann, another biologist at the park.

Equipped with a yardstick to measure baby saguaros, Swann finds only a single specimen after a 10-minute search.

At first glance, it's hard to see anything amiss due to the longevity of the old cacti, which can live for up to two centuries.

According to the park's decennial census, the saguaro population in 2020 was only slightly higher than in 2010, and Swann expects a decline in 2030.

If current trends continue, "then at a certain point... we won't have saguaros in Saguaro National Park," he says.

- A wake-up call? -

Beyond the ecological devastation, the loss of saguaros and glaciers has far-reaching cultural consequences.

For Native American tribes, these natural wonders hold deep spiritual significance.

The Tohono O'odham people consider saguaros their ancestors, and rely on their fruit to make ceremonial syrup.

Similarly, the Blackfeet Nation reveres glaciers as sacred, recognizing their crucial role in sustaining life.

"We were placed here in this area, because of that water," says Termaine Edmo, the tribe's climate change coordinator.

Under her dedicated leadership, the Blackfeet have built snow fences to preserve snow on the Montana grasslands just below the mountains, a moisture-saving technique.

Her personal connection to the land is palpable: the Native American name of one of her daughters, Iitspigoonskoo, means "glacier."

"She's constantly asking me, 'Mommy, what happens when there's no more snow on top of the mountains? Does my Indian name change?'" Edmo says. To which she replied: "'No, then we adapt, baby, just like our ancestors adapted to this new world.'"

Could these losses serve as a wake-up call and prompt more Americans to recognize climate change as a priority?

Wylie Carr, a climate planning specialist for the NPS, agrees that national parks are "natural classrooms" for young and old alike to "really see and experience how climate change is impacting natural and cultural resources."

To this end, Glacier National Park's winding trails are dotted with signs that pose poignant questions.

"How many glaciers will be left for the next generation?" pleads one.

The hope is that raising awareness will inspire conviction -- and action.

L.Johnson--ThChM