Climate warming enables tree seedling establishment beyond the current alpine treeline, but to achieve this, seedlings have to establish within existing tundra vegetation. In tundra, mosses are a prominent feature, known to regulate soil temperature and moisture through their physical structure and associated water retention capacity. Moss presence and species identity might therefore modify the impact of increases in temperature and precipitation on tree seedling establishment at the arctic‐alpine treeline. We followed Betula pubescens and Pinus sylvestris seedling survival and growth during three growing seasons in the field. Tree seedlings were transplanted along a natural precipitation gradient at the subarctic‐alpine treeline in nort...
1.Moss-dominated peat bogs store approximately 30% of global soil carbon. A climate induced shift fr...
In tundra ecosystems, bryophytes influence soil processes directly and indirectly through interactio...
In patches of co-occurring species in natural plant communities, there is a finely poised balance be...
Climate warming enables tree seedling establishment beyond the current alpine treeline, but to achie...
Alpine and arctic tree line expansion depends on the establishment of tree seedlings above the curre...
Forest regeneration in the form of successful seedling establishment is a key factor for the persist...
Long-term warming experiments in arctic tundra have resulted in reduced moss cover and increased vas...
Boreal forests are characterized by an extensive moss layer, which may have both competitive and fac...
1. Winter is a period of dormancy for plants of cold environments. However, winter climate is changi...
In arctic tundra ecosystems mosses dominant the vegetation in terms of productivity and diversity. ...
Above the alpine tree line, bryophytes cover much of the tundra soil surface in dense, often monospe...
Treelines have drawn persistent research interest as they can respond markedly to climate. However, ...
1. Vascular plant growth forms in northern peatlands differ in their strategies to cope with the har...
Arctic and subarctic ecosystems are changing rapidly in species composition and functioning as they ...
1.Moss-dominated peat bogs store approximately 30% of global soil carbon. A climate induced shift fr...
In tundra ecosystems, bryophytes influence soil processes directly and indirectly through interactio...
In patches of co-occurring species in natural plant communities, there is a finely poised balance be...
Climate warming enables tree seedling establishment beyond the current alpine treeline, but to achie...
Alpine and arctic tree line expansion depends on the establishment of tree seedlings above the curre...
Forest regeneration in the form of successful seedling establishment is a key factor for the persist...
Long-term warming experiments in arctic tundra have resulted in reduced moss cover and increased vas...
Boreal forests are characterized by an extensive moss layer, which may have both competitive and fac...
1. Winter is a period of dormancy for plants of cold environments. However, winter climate is changi...
In arctic tundra ecosystems mosses dominant the vegetation in terms of productivity and diversity. ...
Above the alpine tree line, bryophytes cover much of the tundra soil surface in dense, often monospe...
Treelines have drawn persistent research interest as they can respond markedly to climate. However, ...
1. Vascular plant growth forms in northern peatlands differ in their strategies to cope with the har...
Arctic and subarctic ecosystems are changing rapidly in species composition and functioning as they ...
1.Moss-dominated peat bogs store approximately 30% of global soil carbon. A climate induced shift fr...
In tundra ecosystems, bryophytes influence soil processes directly and indirectly through interactio...
In patches of co-occurring species in natural plant communities, there is a finely poised balance be...