Arctic tundra ecosystems are warming almost twice as fast as the global average. Permafrost thaw and the resulting release of greenhouse gases from decomposing soil organic carbon have the potential to accelerate climate warming. In recent decades, Arctic tundra ecosystems have changed rapidly, including expansion of woody vegetation, in response to changing climate conditions. How such vegetation changes contribute to stabilization or destabilization of the permafrost is unknown. Here we present six years of field observations in a shrub removal experiment at a Siberian tundra site. Removing the shrub part of the vegetation initiated thawing of ice-rich permafrost, resulting in collapse of the originally elevated shrub patches into waterlo...
Arctic ecosystems have been affected by severe climate change during the last decades. The increase ...
Over the past decades, vegetation and climate have changed significantly in the Arctic. Deciduous sh...
Warming of the Arctic can stimulate microbial decomposition and release of permafrost soil carbon (C...
Arctic tundra ecosystems are warming almost twice as fast as the global average1. Permafrost thaw an...
Permafrost degradation has the potential to change the Arctic tundra landscape. We observed rapid lo...
Thermokarst features, such as thaw ponds, are hotspots for methane emissions in warming lowland tund...
Thermokarst features, such as thaw ponds, are hotspots for methane emissions in warming lowland tund...
Permafrost peatlands are biogeochemical hot spots in the Arctic as they store vast amounts of carbon...
International audienceIn Arctic regions, thawing permafrost soils are projected to release 50 to 250...
Tundra vegetation productivity and composition are responding rapidly to climatic changes in the Arc...
Rapid Arctic warming is causing permafrost to thaw and exposing large quantities of soil organic car...
International audienceermafrost stores about 1,400 Pg of frozen carbon, mostly in the form of decomp...
Permafrost thaw causes the seasonally thawed active layer to deepen, causing the Arctic to shift tow...
Arctic ecosystems have been affected by severe climate change during the last decades. The increase ...
Over the past decades, vegetation and climate have changed significantly in the Arctic. Deciduous sh...
Warming of the Arctic can stimulate microbial decomposition and release of permafrost soil carbon (C...
Arctic tundra ecosystems are warming almost twice as fast as the global average1. Permafrost thaw an...
Permafrost degradation has the potential to change the Arctic tundra landscape. We observed rapid lo...
Thermokarst features, such as thaw ponds, are hotspots for methane emissions in warming lowland tund...
Thermokarst features, such as thaw ponds, are hotspots for methane emissions in warming lowland tund...
Permafrost peatlands are biogeochemical hot spots in the Arctic as they store vast amounts of carbon...
International audienceIn Arctic regions, thawing permafrost soils are projected to release 50 to 250...
Tundra vegetation productivity and composition are responding rapidly to climatic changes in the Arc...
Rapid Arctic warming is causing permafrost to thaw and exposing large quantities of soil organic car...
International audienceermafrost stores about 1,400 Pg of frozen carbon, mostly in the form of decomp...
Permafrost thaw causes the seasonally thawed active layer to deepen, causing the Arctic to shift tow...
Arctic ecosystems have been affected by severe climate change during the last decades. The increase ...
Over the past decades, vegetation and climate have changed significantly in the Arctic. Deciduous sh...
Warming of the Arctic can stimulate microbial decomposition and release of permafrost soil carbon (C...