Field trip North Greenlands High
School GUX Asiaat
Photo: Advanced Analytical Chemistry -Arctic Pollution Research
2018 (Field course).
All projec ts included numerous sampling trips in the
field (open water and coast line) followed by analyses in dif ferent designated labs at the Arc tic Station.
The projec ts included studies on the size -frac tioned
phy toplankton, species diversit y of net-phy toplankton, ver tical distribution of macroalgae at coast
t ypes with dif ferent exposure, species diversit y of
macroalgae, 3D reconstruc tion of red skeletal muscle
fibers, video -recording of potential feeding behavior, influence of temperature increases on physiology
in Greenland cod and determination of hemoglobin
t ypes in Greenland cod.
The field trip of the high school GUX A siaat to
Qeqer tarsuaq and the Arc tic Station from 3 to 6 Sep tember in 2018 was with 26 students and t wo teachers. At the Arc tic Station we learnt how researchers
estimate how much precipitation is falling as snow.
We also learnt that if we look to the flora, Qeqertarsuaq is a unique place in Greenland with many
dif ferent species. A s an example we found the plant
Angelica, a plant we are not used to in A siaat. Angelica is delicious to eat with sugar. Ac tually, we can
find about 85% of all the plants in Greenland within
the area of Qeqer tarsuaq. We also got an idea how
the landscape in the area was formed and what made
it so special. Long ago, there was ac tive volcanism
and this volcanic ac tivit y gave the unique forms to
the mountains around the station. Finally, we fished
Arc tic char in the ver y clear water of the R øde Elv
river. The stream water around Arc tic Station was the
best we have.
Visits and public outreach
APPG meeting Polar Regions
Climate Change in the Arctic (Book)
Duncan Depledge, James Gray, Mark Menzies, Ste phen Hepburn, John Mann, Brendan O. Hara, Baroness Neville Jones, Baroness J. Smith, United Kingdom
Jessica Haapkyca, Finland
The British Parliament All- Par t y Parliament Group on
Polar Regions visited the station as par t of a travel
relating to (i) British research ac tivities in Greenland,
(ii) liaison with the Greenland polar research communit y and relevant polic y makers, and (iii) Climate
Change. During their stay at Arc tic Station scientific leader Mor ten Rasch gave an introduc tion to
Greenland / Danish Climate Change related research in
Greenland and demonstrated par t of the research activities taking place at Arc tic Station. Visiting period:
28 August 2018, 1 day.
B-Reel Film
Jacob Kelly, Agnes- Lo Åkerlind, Elin Svar tengren,
Björn Tjärnberg, Ola Elisasson, Rebecca Brander,
Sweden and USA
Filming for a documentar y about career changes and
following your dreams. Projec t title: Flipping the ladder. Release of the documentar y is planned for April
2019. Visiting period: 8 December 2018, 2 days.
24
Freelancer and science writer Jessica Haapkyca visited
Arc tic Station to collec t material for a book about
how climate change impac ts the Arc tic Seas. She
conduc ted inter views and par ticipated on a field trip
with the R / V Porsild where plankton was sampled.
The book will be published in August 2019 (in Finnish). Visiting period: 14 September 2018, 4 days.
INTERACT
Elmer Topp -Jørgensen, Aarhus Universit y, Denmark
Visited the Arc tic Station in December 2018.
Elmer has a projec t within INTER ACT where he tries
to increase the cooperation bet ween research stations and the local societ y. He had a communit y
meeting in town where he discussed this item with
the local residents. Visiting period: 3 December 2018,
6 days.
Paaviaarak Jakobsen, Greenland
A s par t of the above mentioned meeting, Paaviaarak
Jakobsen presented the Pisuna projec t, a communit y
university of copenhagen facu lt y of sci e nc e A RC T I C STAT I ON Ann ual Repor t 2 018
2 A R C T I C S TAT I O N
ARCTIC STATION Annual Report 2018 CONTENTS Chairmans welcome ............................................................ 5 Monitoring at Arctic Station ........ .......................................... 6 Research projects ........................ ......................................... 17 Educa
4
Chairmans Welcome Professor Bo Elberling Compared to other years, the summer of 2018 was cold and wet in Greenland. While summer temperatures in Europe were higher than for decades, summer temperatures at Arctic Station were in general low. Despite the weather, the year 2018 has been a very succes
Monitoring at Arctic Station Charlotte Sigsgaard, Regin Rønn, Michele Citterio, Jakob Abermann, Per Juel Hansen, Kirsty Langly, Kirsten S. Christoffersen, Sille Myreng, Daniel Binder, Laura Helene Rasmussen, Morten Rasch, Aart Kroon, Dorthe Krause-Jensen, Birgit Olesen, Thomas Friborg and Bo Elberli
15 10 10 Temperature (oC) Temperature (oC) 5 0 -5 -10 -15 Summer (J, J, A) Winter/coldest months (J, F, M) Mean annual air temperature -20 -25 1992 1996 2000 2004 2008 2012 2016 Figure 2. Annual mean air temperatures at Arctic Station from 1992 to 2018 and mean air temperatures for
31-J an 2-Mar 1-Apr 1-May 31-May 30-J un 30-J ul 29-Aug 28-S ep 28-Oct 27-Nov 27-Dec 2018 1040 1000 960 60 0 40 -10 20 -30 0 Wind speed (m s -1) -20 Rain (mm) 80 10 Temperature (C) Air pressure (mbar) 1-J an 16 12 8 4 0 Wind dir () 300 200 100 S now depth (m) 0 0.8
40 0 Sep Precipitation (mm) 350 Aug Jul Jun May 30 0 250 20 0 150 10 0 50 19 91 19 92 19 93 19 94 19 95 19 96 19 97 19 98 19 99 20 00 20 01 20 02 20 03 20 04 20 05 20 06 20 07 20 08 20 09 20 10 20 11 20 12 20 13 20 14 20 15 20 16 20 17 20 18 0 Figure 5. Stacked monthly values of rain from
Figure 7. Water started to run in the snow covered river bed on 6 June. Several fows with a mixture of water, snow and ice occurred during the day. Photos: Charlotte Sigsgaard and Laura L. Frendrup. Marine monitoring Marine monitoring has been periodically carried out at Arc tic Station since 1924.
Figure 9. About 60-70 mm of rain on the 3 August 2018 caused overland fow and high discharge and high content of suspended sediment in the river. Photo: Elisabeth L. Kolstad. there is of ten a layer of cold water at 50 -10 0 m with temperatures as low as -1.6 C sandwiched bet ween the warmer sur fa
Macroalgae monitoring 8 7 10 m 50 m 200 m The Greenland Ecosystem Monitoring program (GEM) on marine vegetation in the Disko Bay was initiated in the summer of 2018. The program includes studies of tidal and subtidal macroalgae along the shores of Disko Island and Kronprinsens Ejland as specified
Figure 13. Overview, based on drone images, of Fortuna Bay with the tidal vegetation forming a fringe along the shoreline visible as a light brown contour at low tide. Drone operated by Dorte KrauseJensen and Birgit Olesen and drone images analysed and processed by Michael Bo Rasmussen. Growth of s
14 Chlorophyll (ug l-1) 12 Danish Meteorological Institute (DM I) which will pro vide data for in-situ validation data for DM Is remote sensing produc t s. The first complete dataset will be downloaded in 2019. Data received via satellite link already shows seasonal variabilit y in the temperatur
Figure 18. Two moulins on Chamberlin Glacier found in August 2018 (left) and the entrance of one of the moulins which in August 2018 appeared safe to descend. Photos: Michele Citterio. Influence of cloud cover in surface energy balance in Arctic environments Sur face air temperatures in the Arctic
enhance snow and glacier melt is still poorly known, not the least in Greenland. While some authors claim clouds enhance melt water runof f others claim that decreasing cloud cover drives the recent mass loss on the Greenland ice sheet. Despite their crucial impor tance for understanding Arc tic cli
Research Projects Development of methodology for evaluating chemicals discarded in high Arctic waters Kim Gustavson, Eva Friis Møller, Mette Dalgaard, DCE, Department of Bioscience Aarhus University, Denmark The overall aim of the project was to strengthen the basis for evaluation and regulation of
Baleen whale. Photo: Mads Peter Heide-Jørgensen. Qimmeq Anders J. Hansen, Tom Gilbert, University of Copenhagen, Denmark, Nobuyuki Yamaguchi, Qatar University, Quatar, Siz Madsen, Denmark The Qimmeq Project consists of several components including, sled dog genetics, culture history, film- and phot
Greenlandic Perspectives Survey (GPS) AMAP - collection of ring seal samples Kelton Minor, University of Copenhagen, Kraks Fond Institute for Urban Economic Research, Denmark, Ulunnguaq Markussen, University of Greenland, Greenland, Hans Peter Mønsted, University of Southern Denmark, Denmark Sign
CENPERM activities Per Ambus, Anders Michelsen, Laura Helene Rasmussen, Laura Bjørnholt Larsen, Emily Pickering Pedersen, Ludovica D'Imperio, Andreas Westergaard-Nielsen, Trevor James Popp, Steffen Bo Hansen, Sune Olander Rasmussen, Bo Elberling, University of Copenhagen, Denmark, Peter Convey, Brit
A n n u a l R e p o r t 2018 21
Preparing samples in the laboratory . Photo: Advanced Analytical Chemistry - Arctic Pollution Chemistry 2018 (Field course) Photo Kent Pørksen 22
Education CHESS PhD school: Arctic Glacier Field Course Alexios Theofilopoulos, Andreas Alexander, Anais Bretones, Andreas Plach, Calvin Shackleton, Ida Margrete Ringgaard, Jacob Morgan, Jonathan Rheinlander, Karita Kajanto, Lis Allaar t, Margaret Lindeman, Maya Becker, Mor ven Muilwijk, Nicholas Ra
Field trip North Greenlands High School GUX Asiaat Photo: Advanced Analytical Chemistry -Arctic Pollution Research 2018 (Field course). All projec ts included numerous sampling trips in the field (open water and coast line) followed by analyses in dif ferent designated labs at the Arc tic Station
based monitoring projec t focusing on the conditions of the living resources based on input from local fishers and hunters. Visiting period: 5 December, 2 days. Climate Change in Greenland Niels Vinther, Egedal Gymnasium, A sger Vinther Michelsen, Kenneth Sorento, Mediehuset København Denmark Visit
Publications Scientific papers 2018 A lb e r s C. N ., K ra m s h ø j M ., R inna n R . (2018). R a p i d min e ra liz at i o n of b i o g e ni c vo lat il e o rg a ni c co m p o un d s in te m p e rate a n d A rc t i c s o ils . B i o g e o s ci e n ce s 15, 3591-3 6 01. D O I :10.519 4 / b g -15 -
Reports 2018 K a li t a, S . N ., Wo hlra b, S ., Ku e hn e, N . a n d J o hn, U., A l fre d - We g e n e r- I ns t i tu te (2018): Tra ns c r ipto m e ana l y s is of sing l e ce lls: a p la nk to n cha ra c te r iz at i o n of A rc t i c wate r s , 2n d A nnua l M e e t ing of D F G -S P P 19 91 T
Members of the board Professor Anders Michelsen Depar tment of Biology Phone: + 45 2339 8286 E-mail: andersm@bio.ku.dk Professor Bo Elberling (Chairman) Depar tment of Geosciences and Natural Resource Management Phone: + 45 3532 2520 E-mail: be@ign.ku.dk A ssociate Professor Nina Lundholm Natural
A n n u a l R e p o r t 2018 29
Title Arc tic Station Annual Repor t 2018 Publisher Board of the Arc tic Station, Univer sit y of Copenhagen, Denmark Editor A ar t Kroon and Charlot te Sigsgaard L ayout and graphic s Kent Pørk sen, Depar tment of Geosciences and Natural Resource Management Internet ver sion ark tisk station.ku.dk