Response of vegetation and carbon fluxes to brown lemming herbivory in northern Alaska
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Published:2022-06-02
Issue:11
Volume:19
Page:2779-2794
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ISSN:1726-4189
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Container-title:Biogeosciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Biogeosciences
Author:
Plein JessicaORCID, Clark Rulon W., Arndt Kyle A.ORCID, Oechel Walter C., Stow Douglas, Zona DonatellaORCID
Abstract
Abstract. The warming of the Arctic is affecting the carbon cycle of tundra
ecosystems. Most research on carbon fluxes from Arctic tundra ecosystems has
focused on abiotic environmental controls (e.g., temperature, rainfall, or
radiation). However, Arctic tundra vegetation, and therefore the carbon
balance of these ecosystems, can be substantially impacted by herbivory. In
this study we tested how vegetation consumption by brown lemmings (Lemmus trimucronatus) can
impact carbon exchange of a wet-sedge tundra ecosystem near Utqiaġvik,
Alaska during the summer and the recovery of vegetation during the following
summer. We placed brown lemmings in individual enclosure plots and tested
the impact of lemmings' herbivory on carbon dioxide (CO2) fluxes, methane
(CH4) fluxes, and the normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI)
immediately after lemming removal and during the following growing season.
During the first summer of the experiment, lemmings' herbivory reduced plant
biomass (as shown by the decrease in the NDVI) and decreased net CO2
uptake while not significantly impacting CH4 emissions. CH4
emissions were likely not significantly affected due to CH4 being
produced deeper in the soil and escaping from the stem bases of the vascular
plants. The summer following the lemming treatments, NDVI and net CO2
fluxes returned to magnitudes similar to those observed before the start of
the experiment, suggesting a complete recovery of the vegetation and a
transitory nature of the impact of lemming herbivory. Overall, lemming
herbivory has short-term but substantial effects on carbon sequestration by
vegetation and might contribute to the considerable interannual variability
in CO2 fluxes from tundra ecosystems.
Funder
National Aeronautics and Space Administration Office of Polar Programs Horizon 2020
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
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