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Topography and Functional Traits Control the Distribution of Key Shrub Plant Functional Types in Low-Arctic Tundra
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  • Daryl Yang,
  • Wouter Hantson,
  • Kenneth Davidson,
  • Julien Lamour,
  • Bailey Morrison,
  • Verity Gale Salmon,
  • Tianqi Zhang,
  • Kim S. Ely,
  • Charles E. Miller,
  • Daniel Hayes,
  • Stephen B. Baines,
  • Alistair Rogers,
  • Shawn Serbin
Daryl Yang
Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Wouter Hantson
University of Maine
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Kenneth Davidson
American Forests
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Julien Lamour
French National Center for Scientific Research
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Bailey Morrison
University of California Merced
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Verity Gale Salmon
Oak Ridge National Lab, Environmental Sciences Division and Climate Change Science Institute
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Tianqi Zhang
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
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Kim S. Ely
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
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Charles E. Miller
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
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Daniel Hayes
University of Maine
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Stephen B. Baines
Stony Brook University
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Alistair Rogers
Brookhaven National Laboratory (DOE)
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Shawn Serbin
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
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Abstract

The expansion of shrubs into the Arctic tundra fundamentally modifies land-atmosphere interactions. However, it remains unclear how shrub distribution and expansion differ across key species due to challenges with discriminating tundra plant species at regional scales. Here, we combined multi-scale, multi-platform remote sensing and in situ trait measurements to elucidate the distribution patterns and primary controls of two representative deciduous-tall-shrub (DTS) genera, Alnus and Salix, in low-Arctic tundra. We show that topographic features were a primary control on DTSs, creating heterogeneous, but predictable distributions of Alnus and Salix fractional cover (fCover). Alnus was sensitive to elevation and slope and was found on hilly uplands (>10°) within a specific elevational band (200 - 400 m above sea level [MSL]). In contrast, Salix occurred at lower elevations (50 - 300 m MSL) on gentler slopes (3-10°) and required adequate soil moisture associated with its profligate water use. We also show that niche differentiation between Alnus and Salix changed with patch size, where larger patches were more specialized in resource requirements than individual plants of Alnus and Salix. To understand what constrains the growth of DTSs at locations with low fCover, we developed environmental limiting factor models, which showed that topography limits the upper bound of Alnus and Salix fCover in 69.2% and 48.7% of the landscape, respectively. These findings highlight a critical need to better understand and represent topography-controlled processes and functional traits in regulating shrub distribution, as well as a need for more detailed species classification to predict shrubification in the Arctic.
10 Jul 2024Submitted to ESS Open Archive
11 Jul 2024Published in ESS Open Archive