Support for Next-Generation Ecosystem Experiments (NGEE Arctic) Field Campaign Report

An important challenge for Earth System Models (ESMs) is to represent land surface and subsurface processes and their complex interactions in a warming climate. This is especially important for arctic ecosystems where permafrost extent, topography, hydrology, vegetation, disturbance, and biogeochemi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wullschleger, Stan D
Language:unknown
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/1524228
https://www.osti.gov/biblio/1524228
Description
Summary:An important challenge for Earth System Models (ESMs) is to represent land surface and subsurface processes and their complex interactions in a warming climate. This is especially important for arctic ecosystems where permafrost extent, topography, hydrology, vegetation, disturbance, and biogeochemistry are inextricably linked. The implications of such linkages include permafrost thaw and deepening of the active layer, microbial decomposition of vulnerable soil organic matter, altered productivity and migration of tall woody shrubs, and watershed-scale changes in surface and groundwater transport and storage. Although ESMs describe some of these interactions for high-latitude ecosystems, their representation requires extensive confrontation with field and laboratory observations to test and improve models, and to use those models to inspire new observations and experiments. The Next-Generation Ecosystem Experiments (NGEE Arctic) is a 10-year project (2012 to 2022) to improve our predictive understanding of carbon-rich arctic system processes and feedbacks to climate. This is achieved through experiments, observations, and synthesis of existing data sets that strategically inform model process representation and parameterization, and that enhance the knowledge base required for model initialization, calibration, and evaluation. One question of special interest to the NGEE Arctic project addresses how above- and below-ground plant functional traits might change across environmental gradients, and what are the consequences for arctic ecosystem C, water, and nutrient fluxes? Arctic plant traits, and their variation in response to changing environmental conditions, will play a key role in the response of tundra ecosystems to warming, permafrost thaw, and the wetter or drier conditions expected in the future. The appropriate representation of these functional traits in models is necessary to accurately represent ecosystem C, water, and nutrient cycling in tundra ecosystems, now and in the future. We characterized the ...