Nitrogen restricts future sub-arctic treeline advance in an individual-based dynamic vegetation model
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Published:2021-12-13
Issue:23
Volume:18
Page:6329-6347
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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:
Gustafson AdrianORCID, Miller Paul A., Björk Robert G.ORCID, Olin Stefan, Smith BenjaminORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Arctic environmental change induces shifts in high-latitude plant community composition and stature with implications for
Arctic carbon cycling and energy exchange. Two major components of change in
high-latitude ecosystems are the advancement of trees into tundra and the
increased abundance and size of shrubs. How future changes in key climatic
and environmental drivers will affect distributions of major ecosystem types
is an active area of research. Dynamic vegetation models (DVMs) offer a way
to investigate multiple and interacting drivers of vegetation distribution
and ecosystem function. We employed the LPJ-GUESS tree-individual-based DVM
over the Torneträsk area, a sub-arctic landscape in northern Sweden.
Using a highly resolved climate dataset to downscale CMIP5 climate data from
three global climate models and two 21st-century future scenarios (RCP2.6
and RCP8.5), we investigated future impacts of climate change on these
ecosystems. We also performed model experiments where we factorially varied
drivers (climate, nitrogen deposition and [CO2]) to disentangle the
effects of each on ecosystem properties and functions. Our model predicted
that treelines could advance by between 45 and 195 elevational metres by
2100, depending on the scenario. Temperature was a strong driver of
vegetation change, with nitrogen availability identified as an important
modulator of treeline advance. While increased CO2 fertilisation drove
productivity increases, it did not result in range shifts of trees. Treeline
advance was realistically simulated without any temperature dependence on
growth, but biomass was overestimated. Our finding that nitrogen cycling
could modulate treeline advance underlines the importance of representing
plant–soil interactions in models to project future Arctic vegetation
change.
Funder
Academy of Finland Agence Nationale de la Recherche Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung Svenska Forskningsrådet Formas Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
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