Environmental Research Letters, Volume 17, Issue 4
- Anthology ID:
- G22-41
- Month:
- Year:
- 2022
- Address:
- Venue:
- GWF
- SIG:
- Publisher:
- IOP Publishing
- URL:
- https://gwf-uwaterloo.github.io/gwf-publications/G22-41
- DOI:
Range shifts in a foundation sedge potentially induce large Arctic ecosystem carbon losses and gains
Salvatore R. Curasi
|
Ned Fetcher
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Rebecca E. Hewitt
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Peter M. Lafleur
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M. M. Loranty
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Michelle C. Mack
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Jeremy L. May
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Isla H. Myers‐Smith
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Susan M. Natali
|
Steven F. Oberbauer
|
Thomas C. Parker
|
Oliver Sonnentag
|
S. A. Vargas Zesati
|
Stan D. Wullschleger
|
A. V. Rocha
Abstract Foundation species have disproportionately large impacts on ecosystem structure and function. As a result, future changes to their distribution may be important determinants of ecosystem carbon (C) cycling in a warmer world. We assessed the role of a foundation tussock sedge ( Eriophorum vaginatum ) as a climatically vulnerable C stock using field data, a machine learning ecological niche model, and an ensemble of terrestrial biosphere models (TBMs). Field data indicated that tussock density has decreased by ~0.97 tussocks per m2 over the past ~38 years on Alaska’s North Slope from ~1981 to 2019. This declining trend is concerning because tussocks are a large Arctic C stock, which enhances soil organic layer C stocks by 6.9% on average and represents 745 Tg C across our study area. By 2100, we project that changes in tussock density may decrease the tussock C stock by 41% in regions where tussocks are currently abundant (e.g. -0.8 tussocks per m2 and -85 Tg C on the North Slope) and may increase the tussock C stock by 46% in regions where tussocks are currently scarce (e.g. +0.9 tussocks per m2 and +81 Tg C on Victoria Island). These climate-induced changes to the tussock C stock were comparable to, but sometimes opposite in sign, to vegetation C stock changes predicted by an ensemble of TBMs. Our results illustrate the important role of tussocks as a foundation species in determining future Arctic C stocks and highlights the need for better representation of this species in TBMs.