{"id":507,"date":"2013-07-22T07:00:52","date_gmt":"2013-07-22T05:00:52","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uzh.ch\/blog\/gcb-siberia\/?p=507"},"modified":"2013-09-01T20:01:33","modified_gmt":"2013-09-01T18:01:33","slug":"opening-of-the-kodak-station","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.uzh.ch\/blog\/gcb-siberia\/2013\/07\/22\/opening-of-the-kodak-station\/","title":{"rendered":"Opening of the Kodak Station"},"content":{"rendered":"
by Gabriela Schaepman-Strub Kytalyk, July 22, 2013<\/p>\n The area around Chokurdah is ideal to study the effects of climate change on vegetation and feedbacks, as over a relatively short distance at least five different vegetation zones are present that can be studied. So far we only concentrated on Kytalyk (southern hypoarctic tundra according to the Russian classification after B. Yurtsev et al., 1978), but we will evaluate an expansion during our boat trip soon. Last two days I got the chance to explore the more southern area of Chokurdah. Our Japanese colleagues, headed by Atsuko Sugimoto, invited me to the opening ceremony of their new tundra-taiga forest transition station. During the past few years, they were active at several experimental sites with isotope measurements for an improved understanding of the carbon and water fluxes. They now established a more permanent site with a 3m tower with instrumentation to assess the carbon, water, and energy balance.<\/p>\n The celebration started with a scientific presentation of the research by Trofim Maximov and Atsuko Sugimoto to the government of the region in the municipality building of Chokurdah. The presentations were followed by a few questions by locals: \u201cCould the measuring towers be used to enhance the local mobile phone network?\u201d \u201cIs global warming really true (they had heard about the fact that not all scientists agree)?\u201d \u201cCan you help to assess the problem of the recent strong easterly winds that flooded Russkoe Ustje and destroyed the large permafrost cellar needed for storing the fish?\u201d<\/i>.<\/p>\n
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