| Literature DB >> 31955396 |
Virve Ravolainen1,2, Eeva M Soininen3, Ingibjörg Svala Jónsdóttir4,5, Isabell Eischeid6,3, Mads Forchhammer5,7, René van der Wal8,9, Åshild Ø Pedersen6,10.
Abstract
Vegetation change has consequences for terrestrial ecosystem structure and functioning and may involve climate feedbacks. Hence, when monitoring ecosystem states and changes thereof, the vegetation is often a primary monitoring target. Here, we summarize current understanding of vegetation change in the High Arctic-the World's most rapidly warming region-in the context of ecosystem monitoring. To foster development of deployable monitoring strategies, we categorize different kinds of drivers (disturbances or stresses) of vegetation change either as pulse (i.e. drivers that occur as sudden and short events, though their effects may be long lasting) or press (i.e. drivers where change in conditions remains in place for a prolonged period, or slowly increases in pressure). To account for the great heterogeneity in vegetation responses to climate change and other drivers, we stress the need for increased use of ecosystem-specific conceptual models to guide monitoring and ecological studies in the Arctic. We discuss a conceptual model with three hypothesized alternative vegetation states characterized by mosses, herbaceous plants, and bare ground patches, respectively. We use moss-graminoid tundra of Svalbard as a case study to discuss the documented and potential impacts of different drivers on the possible transitions between those states. Our current understanding points to likely additive effects of herbivores and a warming climate, driving this ecosystem from a moss-dominated state with cool soils, shallow active layer and slow nutrient cycling to an ecosystem with warmer soil, deeper permafrost thaw, and faster nutrient cycling. Herbaceous-dominated vegetation and (patchy) bare ground would present two states in response to those drivers. Conceptual models are an operational tool to focus monitoring efforts towards management needs and identify the most pressing scientific questions. We promote greater use of conceptual models in conjunction with a state-and-transition framework in monitoring to ensure fit for purpose approaches. Defined expectations of the focal systems' responses to different drivers also facilitate linking local and regional monitoring efforts to international initiatives, such as the Circumpolar Biodiversity Monitoring Program.Entities:
Keywords: Arctic tundra; Climate change; Ecological monitoring; Ecosystem state; Press driver; Pulse driver
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Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31955396 PMCID: PMC6989444 DOI: 10.1007/s13280-019-01310-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ambio ISSN: 0044-7447 Impact factor: 5.129
Fig. 1Topography, snow cover, hydrology, herbivory, and substrate are general factors supplemental to climate that differentiate High Arctic habitat types on Svalbard: wetlands, dwarf-shrub heathlands, barrens with lichens or mosses, and moss-graminoid tundra (a). Within the context given by the general habitats, transitions between alternative states can happen (b). We suggest the moss-graminoid tundra can be found in a (i) moss, (ii) herbaceous, (iii) or bare patch characterized state. The drivers that cause shifts between these states can be characterized as those that gradually change their impact (‘press’), and those whose impact is a sudden event (‘pulse’). Both biotic and abiotic drivers can push the moss-graminoid tundra in the same direction, e.g. both sudden active layer detachments and high abundance of herbivores trampling or grubbing can cause the shift from the vegetated to the bare patch state. See main text for examples and references
Fig. 2A detailed conceptual model for moss tundra on Svalbard implemented within the monitoring programme Climate-ecological Observatory for Arctic Tundra—COAT. The included drivers are expected to have direct impact on the state shifts. Indirect impacts (dashed lines) and effects the vegetation can have on the herbivores have been outlined earlier (Ims et al. 2013). Climate (pathway 1) can act as a ‘press’ via gradually warming temperature, or as a ‘pulse driver’ through, for example, abrupt extreme winter weather events. Likewise, the impact of herbivores can happen as an abrupt pulse event, as in the case of goose grubbing driving vegetation patches from vegetated to the bare patch state (pathway 2), or as press herbivory by reindeer gradually causing a shift from the moss to the herbaceous state (pathway 3). Fertilization by seabirds is an important driver of state shifts on the coast (pathway 4). See main text for more examples and references
The set of variables derived from the conceptual model for monitoring of vegetation state transitions in moss-graminoid tundra on Svalbard (Fig. 2). Path refers to the pathways outlined in Fig. 2. The relation to the Circumpolar Biodiversity Monitoring Program (CBMP) for terrestrial Arctic and the Focal Ecosystem Components (FEC), and their Attributes (Attr.) are indicated
| State variable | Interval | Method | Path | FEC* | Attr.* |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Moss layer thickness | 1 year | Field measure | |||
| Biomass of vascular plant species and functional groups | 1 year | Point frequency | All plants | Diversity, composition, and abundance | |
| Ice damage | 1 year | Transect, drone and satellite imagery | 1 | ||
| Extent of vegetation types, bare ground | 5 years | Drone and satellite imagery | 2, 3 | All plants | Diversity, composition and abundance/diversity and spatial structure |
| Productivity at peak season | 1 year | Drone and satellite imagery, NDVI | 1 | All plants | Productivity |
| Phenology | 1 year | Drone and satellite imagery, time-integrated NDVI | 1 | All plants | Phenology |
| Air and soil temperatures | Multiple | Weather stations, medium-sized station, small, distributed loggers | 1 | ||
| Permafrost thaw depth | 1 year | Late summer maximum depth at bore hole | 1 | ||
| Snow depth, duration, distribution | Multiple | Field measurement, modelling | 1 | ||
| Soil moisture | Multiple | Weather stations, small loggers | 1 | ||
| Abundance of herbivores | 1 year | Pellet counts, camera traps, population census | 2, 3 | ||
| Grubbing impact | 1 year | Counts | 2, 3 | ||
| Soil nutrient level | 1 year | Near-infra red spectrometry | 2, 3, 4 | ||
| Ground-ice formation | Multiple | Field measurement, modelling | 1 | ||
| Permafrost-soil movement | 5 year | Satellite and drone imagery | 1 |
*The attributes of the focal ecosystem component in the Circumpolar Biodiversity Monitoring Plan; “All plants (species, life-form groups and associational communities) include attributes “diversity, composition and abundance”, “diversity and spatial structure”, “productivity”, and “phenology”