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Ecological and conceptual consequences of Arctic pollution
Author(s) -
Kirdyanov Alexander V.,
Krusic Paul J.,
Shishov Vladimir V.,
Vaganov Eugene A.,
Fertikov Alexey I.,
Myglan Vladimir S.,
Barinov Valentin V.,
Browse Jo,
Esper Jan,
Ilyin Viktor A.,
Knorre Anastasia A.,
Korets Mikhail A.,
Kukarskikh Vladimir V.,
Mashukov Dmitry A.,
Onuchin Alexander A.,
Piermattei Alma,
Pimenov Alexander V.,
Prokushkin Anatoly S.,
Ryzhkova Vera A.,
Shishikin Alexander S.,
Smith Kevin T.,
Taynik Anna V.,
Wild Martin,
Zorita Eduardo,
Büntgen Ulf
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
ecology letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.852
H-Index - 265
eISSN - 1461-0248
pISSN - 1461-023X
DOI - 10.1111/ele.13611
Subject(s) - environmental science , ecology , arctic , taiga , boreal , biogeochemical cycle , dendroclimatology , ecosystem , productivity , physical geography , climate change , climatology , geography , geology , biology , economics , macroeconomics
Although the effect of pollution on forest health and decline received much attention in the 1980s, it has not been considered to explain the ‘Divergence Problem’ in dendroclimatology; a decoupling of tree growth from rising air temperatures since the 1970s. Here we use physical and biogeochemical measurements of hundreds of living and dead conifers to reconstruct the impact of heavy industrialisation around Norilsk in northern Siberia. Moreover, we develop a forward model with surface irradiance forcing to quantify long‐distance effects of anthropogenic emissions on the functioning and productivity of Siberia’s taiga. Downwind from the world’s most polluted Arctic region, tree mortality rates of up to 100% have destroyed 24,000 km 2 boreal forest since the 1960s, coincident with dramatic increases in atmospheric sulphur, copper, and nickel concentrations. In addition to regional ecosystem devastation, we demonstrate how ‘Arctic Dimming’ can explain the circumpolar ‘Divergence Problem’, and discuss implications on the terrestrial carbon cycle.

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