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Climate sensitivity of shrub growth across the tundra biome
Author(s) -
Isla H. MyersSmith,
Sarah C. Elmendorf,
Pieter S. A. Beck,
Martin Wilmking,
Martin Hallinger,
Daan Blok,
Ken D. Tape,
Shelly A. Rayback,
Marc MaciasFauria,
Bruce C. Forbes,
James D. M. Speed,
Noémie BoulangerLapointe,
Christian Rixen,
Esther Lévesque,
Niels Martin Schmidt,
Claudia Baittinger,
Andrew J. Trant,
Luise Hermanutz,
Laura Siegwart Collier,
Melissa A. Dawes,
Trevor C. Lantz,
Stef Weijers,
Rasmus Halfdan Jørgensen,
Agata Buchwał,
Allan Buras,
Adam T. Naito,
Virve Ravolainen,
Gabriela SchaepmanStrub,
Julia A. Wheeler,
Sonja Wipf,
Kevin C. Guay,
David S. Hik,
Mark Vellend
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
nature climate change
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.749
H-Index - 189
eISSN - 1758-6798
pISSN - 1758-678X
DOI - 10.1038/nclimate2697
Subject(s) - tundra , shrub , permafrost , biome , environmental science , climate change , arctic , climatology , physical geography , ecology , ecosystem , geography , geology , biology
Rapid climate warming in the tundra biome has been linked to increasing shrub dominance. Shrub expansion can modify climate by altering surface albedo, energy and water balance, and permafrost, yet the drivers of shrub growth remain poorly understood. Dendroecological data consisting of multi-decadal time series of annual shrub growth provide an underused resource to explore climate-growth relationships. Here, we analyse circumpolar data from 37 Arctic and alpine sites in 9 countries, including 25 species, and â 1/442,000 annual growth records from 1,821 individuals. Our analyses demonstrate that the sensitivity of shrub growth to climate was: (1) heterogeneous, with European sites showing greater summer temperature sensitivity than North American sites, and (2) higher at sites with greater soil moisture and for taller shrubs (for example, alders and willows) growing at their northern or upper elevational range edges. Across latitude, climate sensitivity of growth was greatest at the boundary between the Low and High Arctic, where permafrost is thawing and most of the global permafrost soil carbon pool is stored. The observed variation in climate-shrub growth relationships should be incorporated into Earth system models to improve future projections of climate change impacts across the tundra biome

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