Tundra vegetation is responding rapidly to on-going climate warming. The changes in plant abundance and chemistry might have cascading effects on tundra food webs, but an integrated understanding of how the responses vary between habitats and across environmental gradients is lacking. We assessed responses in plant abundance and plant chemistry to warmer climate, both at species and community levels, in two different habitats. We used a long-term and multisite warming (OTC) experiment in the Scandinavian forest–tundra ecotone to investigate (i) changes in plant community composition and (ii) responses in foliar nitrogen, phosphorus, and carbon-based secondary compound concentrations in two dominant evergreen dwarf-shrubs (Empetrum hermaphro...
Background Tall deciduous shrubs are increasing in range, size and cover across much of the Arctic, ...
Tundra shrubs are slow-growing species limited by low air temperature and scarce nutrient availabili...
Recent observations of changes in some tundra ecosystems appear to be responses to a warming climate...
Tundra vegetation is responding rapidly to on-going climate warming. The changes in plant abundance ...
© The Author(s), 2014. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attributi...
The on-going climate warming is promoting shrub abundance in high latitudes, but the effect of this ...
Climate change has been observed to expand distributions of woody plants in many areas of arctic and...
In the long-term, herbivores and climate warming have been shown to alter nutrient levels in tundra ...
© The Author(s), 2013. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribut...
Rising temperatures can influence ecosystem processes both directly and indirectly, through effects ...
Vegetation composition shifts, and in particular, shrub expansion across the Arctic tundra are some ...
Global air temperature is unequivocally increasing and will keep rising, more rapidly in the Arctic ...
Climate change in cold biomes not only involves higher summer temperatures, but also warmer springs ...
1. Climate warming increases the cover of deciduous shrubs in arctic ecosystems and herbivory is als...
Background Tall deciduous shrubs are increasing in range, size and cover across much of the Arctic, ...
Background Tall deciduous shrubs are increasing in range, size and cover across much of the Arctic, ...
Tundra shrubs are slow-growing species limited by low air temperature and scarce nutrient availabili...
Recent observations of changes in some tundra ecosystems appear to be responses to a warming climate...
Tundra vegetation is responding rapidly to on-going climate warming. The changes in plant abundance ...
© The Author(s), 2014. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attributi...
The on-going climate warming is promoting shrub abundance in high latitudes, but the effect of this ...
Climate change has been observed to expand distributions of woody plants in many areas of arctic and...
In the long-term, herbivores and climate warming have been shown to alter nutrient levels in tundra ...
© The Author(s), 2013. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribut...
Rising temperatures can influence ecosystem processes both directly and indirectly, through effects ...
Vegetation composition shifts, and in particular, shrub expansion across the Arctic tundra are some ...
Global air temperature is unequivocally increasing and will keep rising, more rapidly in the Arctic ...
Climate change in cold biomes not only involves higher summer temperatures, but also warmer springs ...
1. Climate warming increases the cover of deciduous shrubs in arctic ecosystems and herbivory is als...
Background Tall deciduous shrubs are increasing in range, size and cover across much of the Arctic, ...
Background Tall deciduous shrubs are increasing in range, size and cover across much of the Arctic, ...
Tundra shrubs are slow-growing species limited by low air temperature and scarce nutrient availabili...
Recent observations of changes in some tundra ecosystems appear to be responses to a warming climate...