Legacies of Historical Human Activities in Arctic Woody Plant Dynamics

Recent changes in arctic vegetation might not be driven by climate change alone. Legacies of human activities have received little attention as a contributing factor. We examine the extent to which traditional human activities (hunting, herding, fire, wood extraction, and agriculture) have had lasti...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Annual Review of Environment and Resources
Main Authors: Normand, Signe, Hoye, Toke T., Forbes, Bruce C., Bowden, Joseph J., Davies, Althea L., Odgaard, Bent V., Riede, Felix, Svenning, Jens Christian, Treier, Urs A., Willerslev, Rane, Wischnewski, Juliane
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2017
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Online Access:https://research.ulapland.fi/fi/publications/2eac9d25-6148-46b9-9d8a-a581e1dfc882
https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-environ-110615-085454
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Summary:Recent changes in arctic vegetation might not be driven by climate change alone. Legacies of human activities have received little attention as a contributing factor. We examine the extent to which traditional human activities (hunting, herding, fire, wood extraction, and agriculture) have had lasting effects on arctic woody plant communities and therefore might continue to affect biome-wide responses to climate change. Evidence suggests that legacies are likely to be evident across meters to hundreds of kilometers and for decades, centuries, and millennia. The evidence, however, is currently sparse, and we highlight the potential to develop systematic assessments through a circumarctic collaboratory consisting of a network of interdisciplinary field sites, standardized protocols, participatory research, and new approaches. We suggest that human activities should be brought into consideration to increase our understanding of arctic vegetation dynamics in general and to assess woody plant responses to climate change in particular.