1. A Decade of Dwarf Birch Growth across a Canadian Low Arctic Landscape: Exploring the Impacts of Climate Change

Climate change predominantly affects northern regions, and resultant vegetation change (particularly the expansion of arctic shrubs) has the potential to create large-scale, positive climate feedbacks, including the widespread release of CO2 from arctic soils. Understanding the intensity and distrib...

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Published in:Inquiry@Queen's Undergraduate Research Conference Proceedings
Main Author: Andruko, Rhett
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Queen's University 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ojs.library.queensu.ca/index.php/inquiryatqueens/article/view/10608
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spelling ftqueensunivojs:oai:library.queensu.ca/ojs:article/10608 2023-05-15T14:41:26+02:00 1. A Decade of Dwarf Birch Growth across a Canadian Low Arctic Landscape: Exploring the Impacts of Climate Change Andruko, Rhett 2018-02-20 https://ojs.library.queensu.ca/index.php/inquiryatqueens/article/view/10608 unknown Queen's University https://ojs.library.queensu.ca/index.php/inquiryatqueens/article/view/10608 Inquiry@Queen's Undergraduate Research Conference Proceedings; 2017: 11th I@Q Conference Proceedings 2563-8912 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion 2018 ftqueensunivojs 2023-02-05T19:15:33Z Climate change predominantly affects northern regions, and resultant vegetation change (particularly the expansion of arctic shrubs) has the potential to create large-scale, positive climate feedbacks, including the widespread release of CO2 from arctic soils. Understanding the intensity and distribution of arctic shrub expansion is therefore necessary to predict future climate trajectories. Few studies, however, have directly measured vegetation changes in the Canadian continental low Arctic, and similarly, there is a need to better understand the landscape-level factors that determine shrub growth responses to warming. Previous studies in Alaska indicate strong differences in shrub growth responses between habitat-types, attributed to higher nutrient and water supply in low-lying areas. Therefore, this study examines growth patterns of the dominant shrub (Dwarf Birch, Betula glandulosa) in a variety of habitat-types across a low arctic landscape. Significant increases in both shrub cover and stature over ten years were found, but surprisingly there were no differences in growth between habitat-types. Further analyses (pending) will measure inter-annual shrub growth to compare patterns/degrees of variability between habitat-types. Individual shrub growth rates over the past decade correlated to local soil nutrient concentrations, but no other variables, suggesting that local spatial variation in nutrient availability seems to be the primary factor determining shrub growth responses to climate change. Overall, our preliminary results stress the importance of local nutrient variability in controlling shrub responses to warming, and challenge previous studies indicating strong differences in shrub growth responses to warming among habitat-types. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Climate change Dwarf birch Alaska Queen's University, Ontario: OJS@Queen's University Arctic Inquiry@Queen's Undergraduate Research Conference Proceedings
institution Open Polar
collection Queen's University, Ontario: OJS@Queen's University
op_collection_id ftqueensunivojs
language unknown
description Climate change predominantly affects northern regions, and resultant vegetation change (particularly the expansion of arctic shrubs) has the potential to create large-scale, positive climate feedbacks, including the widespread release of CO2 from arctic soils. Understanding the intensity and distribution of arctic shrub expansion is therefore necessary to predict future climate trajectories. Few studies, however, have directly measured vegetation changes in the Canadian continental low Arctic, and similarly, there is a need to better understand the landscape-level factors that determine shrub growth responses to warming. Previous studies in Alaska indicate strong differences in shrub growth responses between habitat-types, attributed to higher nutrient and water supply in low-lying areas. Therefore, this study examines growth patterns of the dominant shrub (Dwarf Birch, Betula glandulosa) in a variety of habitat-types across a low arctic landscape. Significant increases in both shrub cover and stature over ten years were found, but surprisingly there were no differences in growth between habitat-types. Further analyses (pending) will measure inter-annual shrub growth to compare patterns/degrees of variability between habitat-types. Individual shrub growth rates over the past decade correlated to local soil nutrient concentrations, but no other variables, suggesting that local spatial variation in nutrient availability seems to be the primary factor determining shrub growth responses to climate change. Overall, our preliminary results stress the importance of local nutrient variability in controlling shrub responses to warming, and challenge previous studies indicating strong differences in shrub growth responses to warming among habitat-types.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Andruko, Rhett
spellingShingle Andruko, Rhett
1. A Decade of Dwarf Birch Growth across a Canadian Low Arctic Landscape: Exploring the Impacts of Climate Change
author_facet Andruko, Rhett
author_sort Andruko, Rhett
title 1. A Decade of Dwarf Birch Growth across a Canadian Low Arctic Landscape: Exploring the Impacts of Climate Change
title_short 1. A Decade of Dwarf Birch Growth across a Canadian Low Arctic Landscape: Exploring the Impacts of Climate Change
title_full 1. A Decade of Dwarf Birch Growth across a Canadian Low Arctic Landscape: Exploring the Impacts of Climate Change
title_fullStr 1. A Decade of Dwarf Birch Growth across a Canadian Low Arctic Landscape: Exploring the Impacts of Climate Change
title_full_unstemmed 1. A Decade of Dwarf Birch Growth across a Canadian Low Arctic Landscape: Exploring the Impacts of Climate Change
title_sort 1. a decade of dwarf birch growth across a canadian low arctic landscape: exploring the impacts of climate change
publisher Queen's University
publishDate 2018
url https://ojs.library.queensu.ca/index.php/inquiryatqueens/article/view/10608
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Climate change
Dwarf birch
Alaska
genre_facet Arctic
Climate change
Dwarf birch
Alaska
op_source Inquiry@Queen's Undergraduate Research Conference Proceedings; 2017: 11th I@Q Conference Proceedings
2563-8912
op_relation https://ojs.library.queensu.ca/index.php/inquiryatqueens/article/view/10608
container_title Inquiry@Queen's Undergraduate Research Conference Proceedings
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