Glaciers Shrinking at Montana’s Glacier National Park


Glacier National Park (Photo: U.S. Fish & Wildlife)

In a little more than a month, Montana鈥檚 will mark the of its designation by President Taft as this country鈥檚 10th national park. That鈥檚 certainly cause for celebration. Except that the U.S. Geological Survey just released some sobering news: Two more of the park鈥檚 37 named glaciers shrunk to smaller than 25 acres (numbers 11 and 12 to do so), the size at which scientists believe glaciers likely stop moving鈥攄ropping the number of named glaciers there to 25.
 
It鈥檚 this flowing and shifting that make glaciers glaciers, says USGS Research Ecologist Dan Fagre, of the (NRMSC). 鈥淎s they get smaller and smaller, they slow down more and more,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hey could be incrementally moving a little bit. But they鈥檙e not grinding the rock, and releasing nutrients from the rocks.鈥
 
If nothing changes鈥攊n other words, if we can鈥檛 stop the warming significantly鈥擥lacier National Park could lose all of its glaciers sooner than scientists originally thought. Fagre explains with Blackfoot-Jackson Glacier Basin. A 2003 paper describing a showed all glaciers in the basin melting by 2030. But 鈥渟ince that model was created, we looked at the projections and what we actually had in the field,鈥 Fagre says. 鈥淕laciers are melting faster than the model predicted.鈥
 
Fagre鈥檚 quick to say that he doesn鈥檛 believe glaciers will completely disappear within the next decade; although they will continue melting, the rate by which this happens will likely slow down. He does, however, stress the affect that losing glaciers could have on the surrounding environment. First, he notes, they act as reservoirs, releasing cold water that鈥檚 a lifeline for aquatic species such as trout. They also keep the area wet and cool once the snow packs have all melted. Without them, temperatures in those basins will likely spike鈥攑otentially an indication of changes elsewhere that scientists simply can鈥檛 see.
 
Glacier National Park鈥檚 latest losses signify an unfortunate trend to Fagre. 鈥淲e are going to go toward a virtually glacierless state in the next few decades. They鈥檙e not going to be ameliorating stream temperatures in summer. We鈥檝e already lost glaciers entirely from some basins鈥hat鈥檚 the inevitability,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 care whether it is 2033 or 2029 or 2035. It鈥檚 just what鈥檚 happening.鈥
 

To learn more about glaciers, check out the , , or the . Click here for a copy of the full report 鈥.鈥