Holocene variations in summer temperature and effective moisture: Understanding the causes of vegetational dynamics in Alaska

Arctic tree-line response to 21st century warming is an important positive feedback mechanisms that can facilitate further tree line advance and amplify changes to the global heat budget through changes in the planetary albedo and effects on soil carbon pools. However, responses of the forest???tund...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Clegg, Benjamin F.
Other Authors: Hu, Feng Sheng, C??ceres, Carla E., Johnson, Thomas M., Walker, Ian R.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
geo
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2142/26121
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spelling fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:http://hdl.handle.net/2142/26121 2023-05-15T13:11:59+02:00 Holocene variations in summer temperature and effective moisture: Understanding the causes of vegetational dynamics in Alaska Clegg, Benjamin F. Hu, Feng Sheng C??ceres, Carla E. Johnson, Thomas M. Walker, Ian R. 2011-08-25 http://hdl.handle.net/2142/26121 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/2142/26121 undefined IDEALS envir geo Journal Article https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_6501/ 2011 fttriple 2023-01-22T17:05:20Z Arctic tree-line response to 21st century warming is an important positive feedback mechanisms that can facilitate further tree line advance and amplify changes to the global heat budget through changes in the planetary albedo and effects on soil carbon pools. However, responses of the forest???tundra ecotone to the modern warming trend are spatially heterogeneous because controls other than temperature limit tree growth and seedling establishment near tree line. Paleo-investigations can address the sensitivity of the forest???tundra ecotone to external drivers by identifying factors that led to the establishment and persistence of modern vegetation composition. In contrast to many circumpolar regions that experienced advanced positions of forests associated with an early Holocene maximum in solar irradiation, closed boreal forests in Alaska only developed ~6000 years ago after a prolonged forest-tundra phase. The contrasting history of forest development in Alaska compared to circumpolar trends has intrigued paleoecologists for over five decades, and provides a unique opportunity to test alternative hypotheses of ecological and climatic drivers of forest???tundra ecotone dynamics. Progress in understanding Holocene vegetation patterns in Alaska has been hampered by a lack of vegetation-independent climatic and environmental reconstructions. This dissertation project takes advantage of state-of-the-art tools for paleoclimatic reconstruction, including stable isotope analysis of carbonates and midge assemblage analysis, to test the role of orbital forcing and moisture balance on interior Alaskan vegetation assemblages. The results presented here provide some of the first high-resolution, vegetation-independent climate records from Alaska that span the entire Holocene and highlight heterogeneous climatic and vegetation responses to spatially uniform radiative forcing via complex atmospheric feedbacks. The results complement recent neo-ecological work in Alaska that indicates the importance of spring moisture ... Article in Journal/Newspaper albedo Arctic Tundra Alaska Unknown Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id fttriple
language English
topic envir
geo
spellingShingle envir
geo
Clegg, Benjamin F.
Holocene variations in summer temperature and effective moisture: Understanding the causes of vegetational dynamics in Alaska
topic_facet envir
geo
description Arctic tree-line response to 21st century warming is an important positive feedback mechanisms that can facilitate further tree line advance and amplify changes to the global heat budget through changes in the planetary albedo and effects on soil carbon pools. However, responses of the forest???tundra ecotone to the modern warming trend are spatially heterogeneous because controls other than temperature limit tree growth and seedling establishment near tree line. Paleo-investigations can address the sensitivity of the forest???tundra ecotone to external drivers by identifying factors that led to the establishment and persistence of modern vegetation composition. In contrast to many circumpolar regions that experienced advanced positions of forests associated with an early Holocene maximum in solar irradiation, closed boreal forests in Alaska only developed ~6000 years ago after a prolonged forest-tundra phase. The contrasting history of forest development in Alaska compared to circumpolar trends has intrigued paleoecologists for over five decades, and provides a unique opportunity to test alternative hypotheses of ecological and climatic drivers of forest???tundra ecotone dynamics. Progress in understanding Holocene vegetation patterns in Alaska has been hampered by a lack of vegetation-independent climatic and environmental reconstructions. This dissertation project takes advantage of state-of-the-art tools for paleoclimatic reconstruction, including stable isotope analysis of carbonates and midge assemblage analysis, to test the role of orbital forcing and moisture balance on interior Alaskan vegetation assemblages. The results presented here provide some of the first high-resolution, vegetation-independent climate records from Alaska that span the entire Holocene and highlight heterogeneous climatic and vegetation responses to spatially uniform radiative forcing via complex atmospheric feedbacks. The results complement recent neo-ecological work in Alaska that indicates the importance of spring moisture ...
author2 Hu, Feng Sheng
C??ceres, Carla E.
Johnson, Thomas M.
Walker, Ian R.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Clegg, Benjamin F.
author_facet Clegg, Benjamin F.
author_sort Clegg, Benjamin F.
title Holocene variations in summer temperature and effective moisture: Understanding the causes of vegetational dynamics in Alaska
title_short Holocene variations in summer temperature and effective moisture: Understanding the causes of vegetational dynamics in Alaska
title_full Holocene variations in summer temperature and effective moisture: Understanding the causes of vegetational dynamics in Alaska
title_fullStr Holocene variations in summer temperature and effective moisture: Understanding the causes of vegetational dynamics in Alaska
title_full_unstemmed Holocene variations in summer temperature and effective moisture: Understanding the causes of vegetational dynamics in Alaska
title_sort holocene variations in summer temperature and effective moisture: understanding the causes of vegetational dynamics in alaska
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2142/26121
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre albedo
Arctic
Tundra
Alaska
genre_facet albedo
Arctic
Tundra
Alaska
op_source IDEALS
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/2142/26121
op_rights undefined
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