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Shrub expansion in tundra ecosystems: dynamics, impacts and research priorities

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journal contribution
posted on 2011-01-01, 00:00 authored by I H Myers-Smith, B C Forbes, M Wilmking, M Hallinger, T Lantz, D Blok, K D Tape, M MacIas-Fauria, U Sass-Klaassen, E Lévesque, S Boudreau, P Ropars, L Hermanutz, A Trant, L S Collier, S Weijers, J Rozema, S A Rayback, N M Schmidt, G Schaepman-Strub, S Wipf, C Rixen, C B Ménard, Susanna VennSusanna Venn, S Goetz, L Andreu-Hayles, S Elmendorf, V Ravolainen, J Welker, P Grogan, H E Epstein, D S Hik
Recent research using repeat photography, long-term ecological monitoring and dendrochronology has documented shrub expansion in arctic, high-latitude and alpine tundra ecosystems. Here, we (1)synthesize these findings, (2)present a conceptual framework that identifies mechanisms and constraints on shrub increase, (3)explore causes, feedbacks and implications of the increased shrub cover in tundra ecosystems, and (4)address potential lines of investigation for future research. Satellite observations from around the circumpolar Arctic, showing increased productivity, measured as changes in greenness, have coincided with a general rise in high-latitude air temperatures and have been partly attributed to increases in shrub cover. Studies indicate that warming temperatures, changes in snow cover, altered disturbance regimes as a result of permafrost thaw, tundra fires, and anthropogenic activities or changes in herbivory intensity are all contributing to observed changes in shrub abundance. Alarge-scale increase in shrub cover will change the structure of tundra ecosystems and alter energy fluxes, regional climate, soilatmosphere exchange of water, carbon and nutrients, and ecological interactions between species. In order to project future rates of shrub expansion and understand the feedbacks to ecosystem and climate processes, future research should investigate the species or trait-specific responses of shrubs to climate change including: (1)the temperature sensitivity of shrub growth, (2)factors controlling the recruitment of new individuals, and (3)the relative influence of the positive and negative feedbacks involved in shrub expansion.

History

Journal

Environmental research letters

Volume

6

Issue

4

Season

Oct-Dec

Article number

045509

Pagination

1 - 15

Publisher

IOP Publishing

Location

Bristol, Eng.

eISSN

1748-9326

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2011, IOP Publishing Ltd.