Deciduous shrub abundance is increasing in tundra ecosystems as an effect of rising temperatures which may change tundra physical properties and, in turn, microbial communities and biogeochemical processes. Two mechanisms through which shrub presence may affect tundra ecosystems were examined in this study; the physical presence of the shrubs and effects of increasing shrub litter inputs. In a sub-arctic alpine tundra ecosystem, dominated by the deciduous shrub Betula glandulosa, both shrub presence (shrub present and removed) and litter quantity (no litter/litter removed, ambient litter, and twice ambient litter) were manipulated; multiple ecosystem properties where measured within the treatment plots over four years. In Chapter 2, examini...
Tundra vegetation is responding rapidly to on-going climate warming. The changes in plant abundance ...
Tundra ecosystem soils store half of the global soil organic carbon (SOC) pool and have the potentia...
Woody shrubs have increased in biomass and expanded into new areas throughout the Pan-Arctic tundra ...
Deciduous shrub abundance is increasing in tundra ecosystems as an effect of rising temperatures whi...
Rising temperatures due to global warming have resulted in rapid environmental changes in northern e...
Rising temperatures due to global warming have resulted in rapid environmental changes in northern e...
Climate warming is projected to alter the vegetation community composition of arctic and alpine ecos...
Author Posting. © Ecological Society of America, 2017. This article is posted here by permission of...
Recent research using repeat photography, long-term ecological monitoring and dendrochronology has d...
Tundra shrubs are slow-growing species limited by low air temperature and scarce nutrient availabili...
In tundra ecosystems, bryophytes influence soil processes directly and indirectly through interactio...
Vegetation composition shifts, and in particular, shrub expansion across the Arctic tundra are some ...
Arctic and alpine ecosystems are experiencing fundamental changes in vegetation composition due to i...
In tundra ecosystems, global warming is expected to accelerate litter decomposition and to lead to s...
The ongoing shrubification of the Arctic tundra may in the future have serious consequences for the ...
Tundra vegetation is responding rapidly to on-going climate warming. The changes in plant abundance ...
Tundra ecosystem soils store half of the global soil organic carbon (SOC) pool and have the potentia...
Woody shrubs have increased in biomass and expanded into new areas throughout the Pan-Arctic tundra ...
Deciduous shrub abundance is increasing in tundra ecosystems as an effect of rising temperatures whi...
Rising temperatures due to global warming have resulted in rapid environmental changes in northern e...
Rising temperatures due to global warming have resulted in rapid environmental changes in northern e...
Climate warming is projected to alter the vegetation community composition of arctic and alpine ecos...
Author Posting. © Ecological Society of America, 2017. This article is posted here by permission of...
Recent research using repeat photography, long-term ecological monitoring and dendrochronology has d...
Tundra shrubs are slow-growing species limited by low air temperature and scarce nutrient availabili...
In tundra ecosystems, bryophytes influence soil processes directly and indirectly through interactio...
Vegetation composition shifts, and in particular, shrub expansion across the Arctic tundra are some ...
Arctic and alpine ecosystems are experiencing fundamental changes in vegetation composition due to i...
In tundra ecosystems, global warming is expected to accelerate litter decomposition and to lead to s...
The ongoing shrubification of the Arctic tundra may in the future have serious consequences for the ...
Tundra vegetation is responding rapidly to on-going climate warming. The changes in plant abundance ...
Tundra ecosystem soils store half of the global soil organic carbon (SOC) pool and have the potentia...
Woody shrubs have increased in biomass and expanded into new areas throughout the Pan-Arctic tundra ...