Microtopographic Control of Treeline Advance in Noatak National Preserve, Northwest Alaska

by Kathleen McCoy  |   

Drs. Paddy Sullivan and Bjartmar Sveinbjornsson, research scientist and faculty fellow respectively with the Environment and Natural Resources Institute at UAA, are co-authors of a paper published in the March 2010 issue of the journal Ecosystems. The following is the abstract from their paper.

Arctic treeline positions are of fundamental importance to the function of high latitude landscapes, as regulators of surface energy exchange and carbon cycling. Most studies aimed at explaining current and predicting future treeline positions have examined growth trends in mature treeline trees, but treeline advance requires seed production, germination, seedling establishment, and recruitment of new trees beyond the treeline and these processes may not be well correlated with growth of mature trees. Tussock tundra is a widespread, microtopographically complex vegetation type, covering vast areas of northern Alaska and Siberia. We examined a site where the white spruce (Picea glauca) treeline has recently advanced into tussock tundra and asked if white spruce seedlings (approximately 36-cm tall) occurred in tussocks, inter-tussocks, and frost boils disproportionate to the abundance of these habitats in the treeline ecotone. We found that seedlings disproportionately occurred in tussocks and frost boils. Seedlings found in tussocks and frost boils also showed greater branch growth than those in inter-tussocks. Tussocks and frost boils had higher soil temperatures than inter-tussocks. Tussocks had higher N, P, and K availability, whereas frost boils had greater secondary and micronutrient availability. The disproportionate occurrence of seedlings in tussocks and frost boils can likely be explained by the combination of warmer soils and greater nutrient availability.

It is also possible that low competition for primary nutrients contributes to the success of seedlings in frost boils. Results of the study highlight the importance of biotic and abiotic facilitation as mediators of treeline advance in a changing Arctic.

The journal Ecosystems features a distinguished team of editors-in-chief and an outstanding international editorial board and is recognized worldwide as a home for significant research, editorials, mini-reviews and special features.

For more information, contact Dr. Sullivan at paddy@uaa.alaska.edu.

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