News-Extreme weather conditions turning Arctic brown, may impact climate change
Extreme weather conditions turning Arctic brown, may impact climate change
Previously, scientists had found that increasing summer warmth in the Arctic was encouraging vegetation to grow, turning areas green.
The
increasing number of extreme events is causing dieback of Arctic plants or
'browning' across Arctic regions, a study has found. Scientists from the
University of Sheffield in the UK studying the Arctic which is warming twice as
fast as the global average found that plant dieback following these
events could significantly reduce the ability of Arctic ecosystems to help
combat climate change.
Previously,
scientists had found that increasing summer warmth in the Arctic was
encouraging vegetation to grow, turning areas green.
"Despite
the scale of Arctic browning, until now we knew very little about its impacts
on ecosystem carbon balance; the balance between carbon uptake by vegetation
and its release from vegetation and soils," said Rachael Treharne, as a PHD
student at the University of Sheffield.
"This
information is critical to understanding the role of Arctic ecosystems in
regulating global climate, both now and in the future," Treharne said.
The
study, published in the journal Global Change Biology, assessed the impacts of
Arctic browning driven by extreme climatic events.
Researchers
looking at heathland in the Lofoten archipelago of Arctic Norway found the area
had been affected by two extreme climatic events.
One of
the events caused death of the dominant evergreen vegetation, and the second
caused an extensive 'stress response', visible as high levels of protective
anthocyanin (red) pigments in shoots and leaves.
Researchers
found Arctic browning driven by extreme climatic events nearly halves the
ability of widespread Arctic heathlands to take up carbon dioxide.
"Many
climate models assume an arbitrary level of greening (and therefore increasing
CO2 uptake) across the Arctic," Treharne added.
"The scale of the browning we have seen in recent years suggests
the reality may be more complex calling into question our understanding
of the role the Arctic plays in global climate, and whether we should expect
Arctic ecosystems to slow or accelerate future climate change," she said.
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