Earlier snowmelt at high latitudes advances aboveground plant phenology, thereby affecting water, nutrient and carbon cycles. Despite the key role of fine roots in these ecosystem processes, phenological responses to earlier snowmelt have never been assessed belowground. We experimentally advanced snowmelt in two contrasting plant community types, heath and meadow, in northern Sweden and measured above- and belowground phenology: leaf-out, flowering and fine root growth. We expected earlier snowmelt to advance both above- and belowground phenology, and shrub-dominated heath to be more responsive than meadow. Snow melted on average nine days earlier in the manipulated plots than in controls, and soil temperatures were on average 0.9 C higher...
Alpine plant communities are predicted to face range shifts and possibly extinctions with climate ch...
Snow is known to have a major impact on vegetation in arctic ecosystems, but little is known about h...
1. Climate change driven increases in winter temperatures positively affect conditions for shrub gro...
Earlier snowmelt at high latitudes advances aboveground plant phenology, thereby affecting water, nu...
Current changes in shrub abundance in alpine and arctic tundra ecosystems are primarily driven by cl...
Fine roots constitute a large part of the primary production in northern (arctic and boreal) ecosyst...
Climate change is altering spring snowmelt patterns in alpine and arctic ecosystems, and these chang...
During the past three decades the Earth has warmed with a rate unprecedented during the past 1000 ye...
Plant phenology is one of the strongest indicators of ecological responses to climate change, and al...
1. Changes from historic weather patterns have affected the phenology of many organisms worldwide. A...
The warming of terrestrial high-latitude ecosystems, while increasing, will likely be asymmetric acr...
<p>The spatial patterning of alpine plant communities is strongly influenced by the variation in phy...
Background: In tundra ecosystems, the adjustment of phenological events, such as bud burst, to snowm...
Large-scale warming will alter multiple local climate factors in alpine tundra, yet very few experim...
Harsh abiotic conditions–such as low temperatures that lead to spring and summer frost events in hig...
Alpine plant communities are predicted to face range shifts and possibly extinctions with climate ch...
Snow is known to have a major impact on vegetation in arctic ecosystems, but little is known about h...
1. Climate change driven increases in winter temperatures positively affect conditions for shrub gro...
Earlier snowmelt at high latitudes advances aboveground plant phenology, thereby affecting water, nu...
Current changes in shrub abundance in alpine and arctic tundra ecosystems are primarily driven by cl...
Fine roots constitute a large part of the primary production in northern (arctic and boreal) ecosyst...
Climate change is altering spring snowmelt patterns in alpine and arctic ecosystems, and these chang...
During the past three decades the Earth has warmed with a rate unprecedented during the past 1000 ye...
Plant phenology is one of the strongest indicators of ecological responses to climate change, and al...
1. Changes from historic weather patterns have affected the phenology of many organisms worldwide. A...
The warming of terrestrial high-latitude ecosystems, while increasing, will likely be asymmetric acr...
<p>The spatial patterning of alpine plant communities is strongly influenced by the variation in phy...
Background: In tundra ecosystems, the adjustment of phenological events, such as bud burst, to snowm...
Large-scale warming will alter multiple local climate factors in alpine tundra, yet very few experim...
Harsh abiotic conditions–such as low temperatures that lead to spring and summer frost events in hig...
Alpine plant communities are predicted to face range shifts and possibly extinctions with climate ch...
Snow is known to have a major impact on vegetation in arctic ecosystems, but little is known about h...
1. Climate change driven increases in winter temperatures positively affect conditions for shrub gro...