Impact of climate warming on Arctic plant diversity: phylogenetic diversity unravels opposing shrub responses in a warming tundra
Abstract
The Arctic biome is at significant risk, with recent observations suggesting that
climate change is warming the Arctic nearly four times faster than the global
average. Last decade, evidence from experimental warming studies and
observations of ambient warming over time shows how increasing air
temperature in the Arctic has led to changes to arctic vegetation, and
encroachment of trees and shrubs into the tundra. Thus, this amplified Arctic
warming is threatening biodiversity, changing vegetation patterns, and thawing
permafrost with implications for carbon and nutrient dynamics. These are one
of the main concerns of observed plant biodiversity changes (except the loss
of biodiversity itself) as they feedback on the global climate through their
effects on carbon cycling, albedo, and ecosystem energy balance. Studies of
Arctic biodiversity have reported responses in either taxonomic, functional, or
phylogenetic diversity, though phylogenetic has so far been understudied in
the Arctic. These different measures of quantifying biodiversity will vary in
their explanatory value and can have complementary value when looking at
the implications of vegetation changes. The overall aim of this thesis is to
deepen the knowledge of the effect of ambient and experimental climate
warming on taxonomic, functional, and phylogenetic aspects of plant diversity
within and between communities.
In Latnjajaure (northern Sweden) I used a long-term passive warming
experiment using open-top chambers, which include five distinct plant
communities. The communities had distinct soil moisture conditions, leading
to community-specific responses of the plant growth forms (deciduous shrubs,
evergreen shrubs, forbs, and graminoids) and phylogenetic dissimilarity. Moist
communities tended to decrease in soil moisture, which drove similarity to
dryer, more nutrient-poor communities. Warming significantly affected
growth forms, but the direction of the response was not consistent across the
communities. Evidence of shrub expansion was found in nearly all
communities, with soil moisture determining whether it was driven by
deciduous or evergreen shrubs. These changes are expected to affect climate
feedback as the dry, evergreen-dominated heath community, has slower carbon
cycling. This slowdown in carbon cycling is at least partially due to the
evergreen shrubs whose material is harder to decompose than most other arctic
vegetation. As the studied communities are common in the region, it is likely
that future warming will drive community shifts in the tundra landscape.
On a Pan-arctic dataset of warming studies, I explored the effect of scaling
abundance weighting as well as the importance of deeper against shallow
nodes in the phylogeny on warming response and its interaction with soil
moisture and site temperature in the tundra biome. For all metrics, we looked
at both plot level (α-diversity), and the difference between plots (β-
dissimilarity). We show that β-dissimilarity is more sensitive to warming than
α-diversity metrics. Furthermore, we show that sensitivity to abundance and
phylogenetic weighting depends on local soil moisture conditions.
In conclusion, the combined use of taxonomic, phylogenetic, and functional
diversity measures enhances the quality of our assessment of the implications
of arctic vegetation response to warming.
Parts of work
Paper I: Scharn, R., Little, C.J., Bacon, C.D., Alatalo, J.M., Antonelli, A.,
Björkman, M.P., Molau, U., Nilsson, R.H., and Björk, R.G. (2021).
Decreased soil moisture due to warming drives phylogenetic diversity and
community transitions in the tundra. Environmental Research Letters, 16,
064031. https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/abfe8a Paper II: Scharn, R., Brachmann, C.G., Patchett, A., Reese, H., Bjorkman,
A., Alatalo, J., Björk, R.G., Jägerbrand, A.K., Molau U., and Björkman M.P.
(2021). Vegetation responses to 26 years of warming at Latnjajaure Field
Station, northern Sweden. Arctic Science:1-20. https://doi.org/10.1139/as-2020-0042 Paper III: Scharn, R., Negri, I.S., Sundqvist, M.K., Løkken, J.O., Bacon,
C.D., Antonelli, A., Hofgaard A., Nilsson R.H., and Björk, R.G. (2022).
Limited decadal growth of mountain birch saplings has minor impact on
surrounding tundra vegetation. Ecology and Evolution, 12, e9028. https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.9028 Paper IV: Scharn, R., Töpel, M., Bjorkman, A., Ou, T., and Björk R.G.
(with contribution of the ITEX consortium). Plant abundance drives β-
diversity changes in the Arctic. Manuscript
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Science
Institution
Department of Earth Sciences ; Institutionen för geovetenskaper
Disputation
Fredagen den 11 November 2022 kl. 13:00 i Hörsalen, Institutionen för geovetenskaper, Guldhedsgatan 5C, Göteborg
Date of defence
2022-11-11
Ruud.scharn@gmail.com
Date
2022-10-13Author
Scharn, Ruud
Keywords
Arctic
Oroarctic
Tundra
long-term warming
soil moisture
vegetation change
shrubification
biodiversity
phylogenetic diversity
plant community structure
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-8069-017-1 (PRINT)
978-91-8069-018-8 (PDF)
Series/Report no.
ISSN 1400-3813 A series 174
Language
eng