EGU2020-4452
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-4452
EGU General Assembly 2020
© Author(s) 2021. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Variation of glacial dynamics in Peru: from valley glaciers to mountain glaciers in a context of climate change

Edwin Loarte1, Katy Medina1, Yadira Curo2, Hairo Leon1,2, Fiorella Quiñonez2, Francisco Castillo2, and Christian Huggel3
Edwin Loarte et al.
  • 1National Institute for Research on Glaciers and Mountain Ecosystems (INAIGEM), Huaraz, Peru
  • 2Santiago Antunez de Mayolo National University (UNASAM), Huaraz, Peru
  • 3University of Zurich, Department of Geography, Zurich, Switzerland (christian.huggel@geo.uzh.ch)

One of the effects of climate change on tropical glaciers is the accelerated reduction of their glacial tongue, reflected in a morphometric variation. Many glaciers that had pronounced tongues and that extended through a valley (Valley glacier) now have reduced their fronts located in the upper parts of the valleys (Mountain glacier).

This has been studied with glaciers of Peru located in 18 mountain ranges located from S 8°20'56" to 15°53'26" and W 77°56'10" to 69°05'14", which are an important solid water reserve that directly supplies the population of 11 departments.

The study focused on the "digit 1" (primary classification) of the Global Land Ice Measurement from Space (GLIMS), which classifies the glaciers mainly in: valley glaciers and mountain glaciers. The processing of raster and vector data through the use of geographic information system and remote sensing tools allowed to analyze the changes and variations affecting glaciers with respect to their morphometry. For this, a comparison was made between glacier coverage in 2016 (using images Sentinel 2), produced by INAIGEM, and the baseline of the glacier coverage of 1955 and 1970 (using aerial photography), from the first inventory of glaciers in Peru, produced by Hidrandina S.A.

The results show a significant morphometric variation of 83.7%, where valley glaciers (from Hidrandina inventory) became mainly mountain glaciers. Nowadays only four mountain ranges have mountain glaciers inside whereas in the past it were nine. When we analyze the results for watersheds, the most morphometric changes were 89% in the Atlantic watershed, followed by 57% in the Pacific watershed; in the Amazon watershed there was not any registration of any mountain glaciers since the first inventory in Peru. The surface changes do not show specific any predominant aspect, and average slopes are between 25° and 50°.

The glacial tongues that are considered valley glacier area located in ablation zones, where the mass balance is negative and there is more susceptibility to reducing their mass and, consequently, to variations in shape and size in a short period. This change has been accentuated in recent decades.

How to cite: Loarte, E., Medina, K., Curo, Y., Leon, H., Quiñonez, F., Castillo, F., and Huggel, C.: Variation of glacial dynamics in Peru: from valley glaciers to mountain glaciers in a context of climate change, EGU General Assembly 2020, Online, 4–8 May 2020, EGU2020-4452, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-4452, 2020