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    Winters are changing: snow effects on Arctic and alpine tundra ecosystems

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    Winters are changing-snow effects on Arctic and alpine tundra ecosystems.pdf (822.2Kb)
    Date
    2022-02-18
    Author
    Rixen, Christian
    Høye, Toke Thomas
    Macek, Petr
    Aerts, Rien
    Alatalo, Juha
    Andeson, Jill
    Arnold, Pieter
    Barrio, Isabel C.
    Bjerke, Jarle
    Björkman, Mats P.
    Blok, Daan
    Blume-Werry, Gesche
    Boike, Julia
    Bokhorst, Stef
    Carbognani, Michele
    Christiansen, Casper
    Convey, Peter
    Cooper, Elisabeth J.
    Cornelissen, J. Hans C.
    Coulson, Stephen
    Dorrepaal, Ellen
    Elberling, Bo
    Elmendorf, Sarah
    Elphinstone, Cassandra
    Forte, T'ai Gladys Whittingham
    Frei, Esther R.
    Geange, Sonya
    Gehrmann, Friederike
    Gibson, Casey
    Grogan, Paul
    Halbritter Rechsteiner , Aud
    Harte, John
    Henry, Greg H.R.
    Inouye, David
    Irwin, Rebecca
    Jespersen, Gus
    Jónsdóttir, Ingibjörg Svala
    Jung, Ji Young
    Klinges, David
    Kudo, Gaku
    Lämsä, Juho
    Lee, Hanna
    Lembrechts, Jonas
    Lett, Signe
    Lynn, Joshua Scott
    Mann, Hjalte Mads
    Mastepanov, Mikhail
    Morse, Jennifer
    Myers-Smith, Isla
    Olofsson, Johan
    Paavola, Riku
    Petraglia, Alessandro
    Phoenix, Gareth
    Semenchuk, Philipp
    Siewert, Matthias
    Slatyer, Rachel
    Spasojevic, Marko
    Suding, Katharine
    Sullivan, Patrick
    Thompson, Kimberly
    Väisänen, Maria
    Vandvik, Vigdis
    Venn, Susanna
    Walz, Josefine
    Way, Robert
    Welker, Jeffery
    Wipf, Sonja
    Zong, Shengwei
    ...show more authors ...show less authors
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    Snow is an important driver of ecosystem processes in cold biomes. Snow accumulation determines ground temperature, light conditions and moisture availability during winter. It also affects the growing season’s start and end, and plant access to moisture and nutrients. Here, we review the current knowledge of the snow cover’s role for vegetation, plant-animal interactions, permafrost conditions, microbial processes and biogeochemical cycling. We also compare studies of natural snow gradients with snow manipulation studies, altering snow depth and duration, to assess time scale difference of these approaches. The number of studies on snow in tundra ecosystems has increased considerably in recent years, yet we still lack a comprehensive overview of how altered snow conditions will affect these ecosystems. In specific, we found a mismatch in the timing of snowmelt when comparing studies of natural snow gradients with snow manipulations. We found that snowmelt timing achieved by manipulative studies (average 7.9 days advance, 5.5 days delay) were substantially lower than those observed over spatial gradients (mean range of 56 days) or due to interannual variation (mean range of 32 days). Differences between snow study approaches need to be accounted for when projecting snow dynamics and their impact on ecosystems in future climates.
    DOI/handle
    http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/AS-2020-0058
    http://hdl.handle.net/10576/30038
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    • Earth Science Cluster [‎216‎ items ]

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