Literature DB >> 28464494

High Arctic summer warming tracked by increased Cassiope tetragona growth in the world's northernmost polar desert.

Stef Weijers1, Agata Buchwal2,3, Daan Blok4, Jörg Löffler1, Bo Elberling5.   

Abstract

Rapid climate warming has resulted in shrub expansion, mainly of erect deciduous shrubs in the Low Arctic, but the more extreme, sparsely vegetated, cold and dry High Arctic is generally considered to remain resistant to such shrub expansion in the next decades. Dwarf shrub dendrochronology may reveal climatological causes of past changes in growth, but is hindered at many High Arctic sites by short and fragmented instrumental climate records. Moreover, only few High Arctic shrub chronologies cover the recent decade of substantial warming. This study investigated the climatic causes of growth variability of the evergreen dwarf shrub Cassiope tetragona between 1927 and 2012 in the northernmost polar desert at 83°N in North Greenland. We analysed climate-growth relationships over the period with available instrumental data (1950-2012) between a 102-year-long C. tetragona shoot length chronology and instrumental climate records from the three nearest meteorological stations, gridded climate data, and North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) and Arctic Oscillation (AO) indices. July extreme maximum temperatures (JulTemx ), as measured at Alert, Canada, June NAO, and previous October AO, together explained 41% of the observed variance in annual C. tetragona growth and likely represent in situ summer temperatures. JulTemx explained 27% and was reconstructed back to 1927. The reconstruction showed relatively high growing season temperatures in the early to mid-twentieth century, as well as warming in recent decades. The rapid growth increase in C. tetragona shrubs in response to recent High Arctic summer warming shows that recent and future warming might promote an expansion of this evergreen dwarf shrub, mainly through densification of existing shrub patches, at High Arctic sites with sufficient winter snow cover and ample water supply during summer from melting snow and ice as well as thawing permafrost, contrasting earlier notions of limited shrub growth sensitivity to summer warming in the High Arctic.
© 2017 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  North Atlantic Oscillation; climate change; dendrochronology; dendroecology; dwarf shrubs; early twentieth-century warming; shrub expansion; soil moisture; temperature proxy; tundra

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28464494     DOI: 10.1111/gcb.13747

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Glob Chang Biol        ISSN: 1354-1013            Impact factor:   10.863


  3 in total

1.  Temperature sensitivity of willow dwarf shrub growth from two distinct High Arctic sites.

Authors:  Agata Buchwal; Stef Weijers; Daan Blok; Bo Elberling
Journal:  Int J Biometeorol       Date:  2018-12-03       Impact factor: 3.787

2.  Leaf Anatomy, Morphology and Photosynthesis of Three Tundra Shrubs after 7-Year Experimental Warming on Changbai Mountain.

Authors:  Yumei Zhou; Jifeng Deng; Zhijuan Tai; Lifen Jiang; Jianqiu Han; Gelei Meng; Mai-He Li
Journal:  Plants (Basel)       Date:  2019-08-07

3.  Warming-induced tipping points of Arctic and alpine shrub recruitment.

Authors:  Xiaoming Lu; Eryuan Liang; Flurin Babst; J Julio Camarero; Ulf Büntgen
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2022-03-01       Impact factor: 11.205

  3 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.