DAMMING JAMES BAY: I. POTENTIAL IMPACTS ON COASTAL CLIMATE AND THE WATER BALANCE
- 1 March 1992
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Canadian Geographies / Géographies canadiennes
- Vol. 36 (1) , 2-7
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1541-0064.1992.tb01108.x
Abstract
The proposed grand Canal project calls for the damming of James Bay and the diversion of its water southward. This first part of a two‐part study models some potential impacts on the climate, water balance, and growth patterns in the James Bay coastal zone. Use is made of a linear relationship of Bowen ratio and temperature, developed from studies of coastal wetlands in southern and northwestern James Bay and central Hudson Bay. It is hypothesized that changing James Bay into a fresh‐water lake and disrupting its coastal currents would result in a delayed Bay ice melt of unknown length in the spring. Allowing a delay to vary between 0 and 30 days results in the prediction of lesser evaporation and greater water surplus. These differences in magnitude increase with the length of delayed melt, but in all cases are most strongly evident during the peak of the growing season. Colder and wetter conditions would have a strong ecological impact on all coastal areas of western and southern James Bay. In the northwest this could change the species composition of coastal flora, cause forests to retreat from the coast, and result in the growth of permafrost there.This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- DAMMING JAMES BAY: II. IMPACTS ON COASTAL MARSHESCanadian Geographies / Géographies canadiennes, 1992
- Advection in the Coastal Hudson Bay Lowlands, Canada. I. The Terrestrial Surface Energy BalanceArctic and Alpine Research, 1991
- Advection in the Coastal Hudson Bay Lowlands, Canada. II. Impact of Atmospheric Divergence on the Surface Energy BalanceArctic and Alpine Research, 1991
- Impacts of Hudson Bay on the Terrestrial Climate of the Hudson Bay LowlandsArctic and Alpine Research, 1991
- Energy balance of the intertidal zone of Western Hudson bay II: Ice‐dominated periods and seasonal patternsAtmosphere-Ocean, 1989
- Studies of a subarctic coastal marsh, II. SalinityJournal of Hydrology, 1988
- The energy balance in the coastal environment of James Bay and Hudson Bay during the growing seasonJournal of Climatology, 1987
- Vegetation patterns in James Bay coastal marshes. I. Environmental factors on the south coastCanadian Journal of Botany, 1986
- Impact of Hudson Bay on the energy balance in the Hudson Bay Lowlands and the potential for climatic modificationAtmosphere-Ocean, 1985
- Effects of the hydroelectric developments on the oceanographic surface parameters of Hudson BayAtmosphere-Ocean, 1983