Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Arctic tundra shrubification: a review of mechanisms and impacts on ecosystem carbon balance

Z. A. Mekonnen, W. J. Riley, Logan T. Berner, Nicholas Bouskill, Margaret Torn, Go Iwahana, Amy Breen, Isla H. Myers‐Smith, Mariana García Criado, Yanlan Liu, E. S. Euskirchen, S. J. Goetz, Michelle C. Mack, R. F. Grant

Environmental Research Letters · 2021

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Summary

Abstract Vegetation composition shifts, and in particular, shrub expansion across the Arctic tundra are some of the most important and widely observed responses of high-latitude ecosystems to rapid climate warming. These changes in vegetation potentially alter ecosystem carbon balances by affecting a complex set of soil–plant–atmosphere interactions. In this review, we synthesize the literature on (a) observed shrub expansion, (b) key climatic and environmental controls and mechanisms that affect shrub expansion, (c) impacts of shrub expansion on ecosystem carbon balance, and (d) research gaps and future directions to improve process representations in land models. A broad range of evidence, including in-situ observations, warming experiments, and remotely sensed vegetation indices have sh

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1088/1748-9326/abf28b
Catalogue ID
SNmokym72u-rjmvtc
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