Elevation shapes alpine snow algal blooms and their influence on albedo reduction

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Elevation shapes alpine snow algal blooms and their influence on albedo reduction

Authors

Almela, P.; Hotaling, S.; Giersch, J.; Klip, H. C. L.; Elser, J. J.; Hamilton, T.

Abstract

Snow algae darken snowpacks and accelerate melt worldwide. Although elevation strongly structures the physical conditions of mountain snowfields, its influence on snow algal traits and their effects on snowpack reflectance remains unclear. Here, we investigated snow algal composition, cellular traits, and optical properties in summer blooms across an elevational range of 1,059-3,423 m a.s.l. in the western United States, spanning two elevational gradients in the Cascade Range (CA, OR, WA) and the Rocky Mountains (UT, WY, MT). Across all samples (n = 294), snow albedo declined strongly with increasing algal cell density, indicating that total biomass, rather than pigment composition, is the dominant driver of albedo reduction. However, within Sanguina-dominated blooms (117 of 206 samples bloom samples identified across the dataset), neither relative abundance nor algal cell density varied systematically with elevation. Instead, mean cell size increased with elevation, while per-cell pigment concentrations declined, leading to higher astaxanthin:chlorophyll-a ratios driven primarily by reductions in chlorophyll-a per cell. These elevation-dependent shifts in cell size and pigment balance were consistent across both mountain ranges, indicating phenotypic acclimation to increasing environmental stress with elevation. Together, these findings link cellular-scale acclimation of a widespread snow alga to radiative processes shaping mountain snowpacks.

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