Patterns of shrub expansion in Alaskan arctic river corridors suggest phase transition

The open access fee for this work was funded through the Texas A&M University Open Access to Knowledge (OAK) Fund. Recent increases in deciduous shrub cover are a primary focus of terrestrial Arctic research. This study examined the historic spatial patterns of shrub expansion on the North Slope...

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Main Authors: Naito, Adam T, Cairns, David M
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: John Wiley and Sons, Inc. 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/154844
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spelling fttexasamuniv:oai:oaktrust.library.tamu.edu:1969.1/154844 2023-07-16T03:55:17+02:00 Patterns of shrub expansion in Alaskan arctic river corridors suggest phase transition Naito, Adam T Cairns, David M 2015 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/154844 en_US eng John Wiley and Sons, Inc. Naito AT and Cairns DM (2015) Patterns of shrub expansion in Alaskan Arctic river corridors suggest a phase transition. Ecology and Evolution 5(1): 87-101. https://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/154844 Attribution 3.0 United States http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/us/ Alaska Arctic landscape analysis phase transition shrub expansion tundra Article 2015 fttexasamuniv 2023-06-27T22:51:42Z The open access fee for this work was funded through the Texas A&M University Open Access to Knowledge (OAK) Fund. Recent increases in deciduous shrub cover are a primary focus of terrestrial Arctic research. This study examined the historic spatial patterns of shrub expansion on the North Slope of Alaska to determine the potential for a phase transition from tundra to shrubland. We examined the historic variability of landscape-scale tall shrub expansion patterns on nine sites within river valleys in the Brooks Range and North Slope uplands (BRNS) between the 1950s and circa 2010 by calculating percent cover (PCTCOV), patch density (PADENS), patch size variability (CVSIZE), mean nearest neighbor distance (MEDIST) and the multi-scale information fractal dimension (dI) to assess spatial homogeneity for shrub cover. We also devised conceptual models for trends in these metrics before, during, and after a phase transition, and compared these to our results. By developing a regression equation between PCTCOV and dI and using universal critical dI values, we derived the PCTCOV required for a phase transition to occur. All nine sites exhibited increases in PCTCOV. Five of the nine sites exhibited an increase in PADENS, seven exhibited an increase in CVSIZE, and five exhibited a decrease in MEDIST. The dI values for each site exceeded the requirements necessary for a phase transition. Although fine-scale heterogeneity is still present, landscape-scale patterns suggest our study areas are either currently in a state of phase transition from tundra to shrubland or are progressing towards spatial homogeneity for shrubland. Our results indicate that the shrub tundra in the river valleys of the north slope of Alaska has reached a tipping point. If climate trends observed in recent decades continue, the shrub tundra will continue towards homogeneity with regard to the cover of tall shrubs. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Arctic Brooks Range north slope Tundra Alaska Texas A&M University Digital Repository Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection Texas A&M University Digital Repository
op_collection_id fttexasamuniv
language English
topic Alaska
Arctic
landscape analysis
phase transition
shrub expansion
tundra
spellingShingle Alaska
Arctic
landscape analysis
phase transition
shrub expansion
tundra
Naito, Adam T
Cairns, David M
Patterns of shrub expansion in Alaskan arctic river corridors suggest phase transition
topic_facet Alaska
Arctic
landscape analysis
phase transition
shrub expansion
tundra
description The open access fee for this work was funded through the Texas A&M University Open Access to Knowledge (OAK) Fund. Recent increases in deciduous shrub cover are a primary focus of terrestrial Arctic research. This study examined the historic spatial patterns of shrub expansion on the North Slope of Alaska to determine the potential for a phase transition from tundra to shrubland. We examined the historic variability of landscape-scale tall shrub expansion patterns on nine sites within river valleys in the Brooks Range and North Slope uplands (BRNS) between the 1950s and circa 2010 by calculating percent cover (PCTCOV), patch density (PADENS), patch size variability (CVSIZE), mean nearest neighbor distance (MEDIST) and the multi-scale information fractal dimension (dI) to assess spatial homogeneity for shrub cover. We also devised conceptual models for trends in these metrics before, during, and after a phase transition, and compared these to our results. By developing a regression equation between PCTCOV and dI and using universal critical dI values, we derived the PCTCOV required for a phase transition to occur. All nine sites exhibited increases in PCTCOV. Five of the nine sites exhibited an increase in PADENS, seven exhibited an increase in CVSIZE, and five exhibited a decrease in MEDIST. The dI values for each site exceeded the requirements necessary for a phase transition. Although fine-scale heterogeneity is still present, landscape-scale patterns suggest our study areas are either currently in a state of phase transition from tundra to shrubland or are progressing towards spatial homogeneity for shrubland. Our results indicate that the shrub tundra in the river valleys of the north slope of Alaska has reached a tipping point. If climate trends observed in recent decades continue, the shrub tundra will continue towards homogeneity with regard to the cover of tall shrubs.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Naito, Adam T
Cairns, David M
author_facet Naito, Adam T
Cairns, David M
author_sort Naito, Adam T
title Patterns of shrub expansion in Alaskan arctic river corridors suggest phase transition
title_short Patterns of shrub expansion in Alaskan arctic river corridors suggest phase transition
title_full Patterns of shrub expansion in Alaskan arctic river corridors suggest phase transition
title_fullStr Patterns of shrub expansion in Alaskan arctic river corridors suggest phase transition
title_full_unstemmed Patterns of shrub expansion in Alaskan arctic river corridors suggest phase transition
title_sort patterns of shrub expansion in alaskan arctic river corridors suggest phase transition
publisher John Wiley and Sons, Inc.
publishDate 2015
url https://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/154844
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Arctic
Brooks Range
north slope
Tundra
Alaska
genre_facet Arctic
Arctic
Brooks Range
north slope
Tundra
Alaska
op_relation Naito AT and Cairns DM (2015) Patterns of shrub expansion in Alaskan Arctic river corridors suggest a phase transition. Ecology and Evolution 5(1): 87-101.
https://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/154844
op_rights Attribution 3.0 United States
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/us/
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