Soil Analysis Treeline Summary at Agashashok River, Alaska 2016 - 2018

Overview: It has long been thought that temperature exerts a direct control on growth of treeline trees and the position of the treeline. However, our recent work in the Arctic with white spruce suggests that indirect effects of temperature on soil nutrient availability may be of equal or greater im...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: McMillan, Cameron
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: NSF Arctic Data Center 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.18739/a26t0gx1p
https://arcticdata.io/catalog/view/doi:10.18739/A26T0GX1P
id ftdatacite:10.18739/a26t0gx1p
record_format openpolar
spelling ftdatacite:10.18739/a26t0gx1p 2023-05-15T14:54:32+02:00 Soil Analysis Treeline Summary at Agashashok River, Alaska 2016 - 2018 McMillan, Cameron 2020 text/xml https://dx.doi.org/10.18739/a26t0gx1p https://arcticdata.io/catalog/view/doi:10.18739/A26T0GX1P en eng NSF Arctic Data Center Arctic Boreal Treeline White spruce Snow Microbe Nitrogen Phosphorus Carbon dataset Dataset 2020 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.18739/a26t0gx1p 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z Overview: It has long been thought that temperature exerts a direct control on growth of treeline trees and the position of the treeline. However, our recent work in the Arctic with white spruce suggests that indirect effects of temperature on soil nutrient availability may be of equal or greater importance. We hypothesize that cold soils at the treeline, particularly during winter, limit microbial activity and nutrient availability to the point where trees are barely able to survive and grow. Measurements made during winter have revealed that Arctic forests maintain snowpacks that are much deeper than observed at treeline. Trees are thought to trap snow and lead to a deeper snowpack, insulating the soil from cold air and allowing for greater overwinter microbial activity and greater nutrient mineralization. Indeed, we found a strong positive correlation between white spruce growth and winter snow depth. We propose to isolate the mechanisms underlying this correlation by using snowfences to manipulate winter snow depth and fertilizer to increase soil nutrient availability at three treelines that differ in soil moisture. To provide an experimental test of the importance of temperature as a direct control on treeline tree growth, we propose to incorporate experimental shoot warming into our snowfence experiment in a factorial design. We predict that both experimental snow and nutrient additions will lead to large increases in microbial activity, photosynthesis, tree growth, seed quality, seed production, seedling establishment and recruitment of new trees. We expect to observe the greatest positive responses where soils are wet and cold. Meanwhile, we predict that shoot warming will lead to negligible changes in growth. This research will elucidate the relationship between snow depth and soil nutrient availability, and determine the relative importance of nutrient and temperature limitations at treeline to white spruce – a dominant member of the boreal forest and the northernmost tree species in North America. Intellectual Merit: The position of the Arctic treeline is an important regulator of surface energy budgets, carbon cycling and subsistence resources in high latitude environments. Our recent research provides correlative evidence of the importance of winter snow depth as a driver of tree growth. Here, we propose to experimentally isolate the importance of snow depth and soil nutrient availability and examine the consequences for microbial processes and tree performance. This is a novel proposal, as we aim to link microbial ecology with large-scale landscape patterns of relevance to regional and global climates. If our hypotheses are confirmed, our findings will contradict the prevailing theory of treeline causation, alter our predictions of where and when treelines may advance and necessitate revision of the many paleoclimate reconstructions based upon correlations between temperature and tree growth near the Arctic treeline. Dataset Arctic Alaska DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language English
topic Arctic
Boreal
Treeline
White spruce
Snow
Microbe
Nitrogen
Phosphorus
Carbon
spellingShingle Arctic
Boreal
Treeline
White spruce
Snow
Microbe
Nitrogen
Phosphorus
Carbon
McMillan, Cameron
Soil Analysis Treeline Summary at Agashashok River, Alaska 2016 - 2018
topic_facet Arctic
Boreal
Treeline
White spruce
Snow
Microbe
Nitrogen
Phosphorus
Carbon
description Overview: It has long been thought that temperature exerts a direct control on growth of treeline trees and the position of the treeline. However, our recent work in the Arctic with white spruce suggests that indirect effects of temperature on soil nutrient availability may be of equal or greater importance. We hypothesize that cold soils at the treeline, particularly during winter, limit microbial activity and nutrient availability to the point where trees are barely able to survive and grow. Measurements made during winter have revealed that Arctic forests maintain snowpacks that are much deeper than observed at treeline. Trees are thought to trap snow and lead to a deeper snowpack, insulating the soil from cold air and allowing for greater overwinter microbial activity and greater nutrient mineralization. Indeed, we found a strong positive correlation between white spruce growth and winter snow depth. We propose to isolate the mechanisms underlying this correlation by using snowfences to manipulate winter snow depth and fertilizer to increase soil nutrient availability at three treelines that differ in soil moisture. To provide an experimental test of the importance of temperature as a direct control on treeline tree growth, we propose to incorporate experimental shoot warming into our snowfence experiment in a factorial design. We predict that both experimental snow and nutrient additions will lead to large increases in microbial activity, photosynthesis, tree growth, seed quality, seed production, seedling establishment and recruitment of new trees. We expect to observe the greatest positive responses where soils are wet and cold. Meanwhile, we predict that shoot warming will lead to negligible changes in growth. This research will elucidate the relationship between snow depth and soil nutrient availability, and determine the relative importance of nutrient and temperature limitations at treeline to white spruce – a dominant member of the boreal forest and the northernmost tree species in North America. Intellectual Merit: The position of the Arctic treeline is an important regulator of surface energy budgets, carbon cycling and subsistence resources in high latitude environments. Our recent research provides correlative evidence of the importance of winter snow depth as a driver of tree growth. Here, we propose to experimentally isolate the importance of snow depth and soil nutrient availability and examine the consequences for microbial processes and tree performance. This is a novel proposal, as we aim to link microbial ecology with large-scale landscape patterns of relevance to regional and global climates. If our hypotheses are confirmed, our findings will contradict the prevailing theory of treeline causation, alter our predictions of where and when treelines may advance and necessitate revision of the many paleoclimate reconstructions based upon correlations between temperature and tree growth near the Arctic treeline.
format Dataset
author McMillan, Cameron
author_facet McMillan, Cameron
author_sort McMillan, Cameron
title Soil Analysis Treeline Summary at Agashashok River, Alaska 2016 - 2018
title_short Soil Analysis Treeline Summary at Agashashok River, Alaska 2016 - 2018
title_full Soil Analysis Treeline Summary at Agashashok River, Alaska 2016 - 2018
title_fullStr Soil Analysis Treeline Summary at Agashashok River, Alaska 2016 - 2018
title_full_unstemmed Soil Analysis Treeline Summary at Agashashok River, Alaska 2016 - 2018
title_sort soil analysis treeline summary at agashashok river, alaska 2016 - 2018
publisher NSF Arctic Data Center
publishDate 2020
url https://dx.doi.org/10.18739/a26t0gx1p
https://arcticdata.io/catalog/view/doi:10.18739/A26T0GX1P
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Alaska
genre_facet Arctic
Alaska
op_doi https://doi.org/10.18739/a26t0gx1p
_version_ 1766326249877143552