ARCTIC WARMING: NERI CONTRIBUTES TO DESCRIBING
THE STATUS OF ECOLOGICAL CHANGE IN SCIENCE


Environmental Panorama
International
September of 2009


11 September 2009 - Mountain avens. Arctic warming in recent decades has had a great impact on the species. The growing season in the High Arctic in some places starts considerably earlier and plants such as Arctic bell heather (Cassiope tetragona) and mountain avens (Dryas octopetala) now start blooming two-three weeks earlier. Photo: Mads C. Forchhammer.

By Steen Voigt

Nine researchers from Denmark’s National Environmental Research Institute (NERI), Aarhus University form part of a team of world-leading Arctic researchers presenting an overall status of the observed climate effects on Arctic plants, animals and ecosystems in the latest issue of Science.

NERI's polar researchers primarily have Greenland as the location for their work, especially in and around the Zackenberg research station in North-east Greenland, while the remaining Danish and international colleagues contribute to the four-page-long article in Science with results from other parts of the Arctic.

The status featured in Science is a direct result of the conference ’After the Melt’, held by NERI at Aarhus University last summer in connection with the International Polar Year (IPY). Here, scientists from around the world presented the newest research results concerning the significance of global warming for the Arctic flora and fauna, ecosystem and food chain changes, and exchange of greenhouse gases such as CO2 and methane in Arctic areas.

Numerous changes
Climate change in the Arctic takes place much faster than in other places around the globe. Snow cover on land and sea ice have declined dramatically over the last 30 years as a result of progressive warming in the Arctic. Warming has led to a large number of conspicuous ecological changes but also less visible, more indirect changes for e.g. animals and plants. Changes that have only been able to be detected by means of ecosystem observations over a number of years, such as those carried out since the mid-11000s at Zackenberg and Kangerlussuaq.

Here, NERI's researchers have, for example, demonstrated that spring is arriving progressively earlier, with consequences in turn for the appearance of a range of plants and insects in spring. Also in West Greenland, near Kangerlussuaq, plants are blooming earlier due to higher temperatures, whereas the reindeer population has not yet managed to adapt the timing of calving to the earlier plant growth. The result has been a reduced number of births and increased mortality among calves.

Good for reindeer, bad for polar bears
’The great strength in our status article is that it summarizes the consequences for many land, freshwater and marine organisms and their environment in the Arctic’, say two of the authors from NERI, Professor Mads C. Forchhammer and Professor Eric Post. ’The polar bear is a good example of how wrong it can go, as both survival and reproduction rates have fallen due to the rapidly shrinking sea ice. But effects of warming in the Arctic can go both ways. For reindeer in Svalbard, increased periodic melting of snow cover has over recent years increased the reindeer’s access to the plant food sources, and birth as well as survival rates have risen. Similarly, migrating species such as geese benefit from the warming because longer summer seasons in the breeding grounds give more offspring and greater area in which to breed.’

Further change to come
’Another interesting angle brought to light in the article in Science is that the effect of warming on all the ways of life of the various organisms contributes to changes in the composition and function of Arctic ecosystems. And with the migration of more southerly species northwards there is no doubt that further change is in store for Arctic ecosystems’, explain Mads C. Forchhammer and Eric Post.'

The researchers conclude the article with a summary of a range of scientific areas that should be focused upon in future research on climate impacts in the Arctic, including conservation, trophic interactions, ecological dynamics outside the growing season, the ability of ecosystems to withstand climate change and the significance of extreme events. Systematic, long-term baseline studies, like those carried out at Zackenberg, are mentioned as one of the most informative professional tools in assessing the ecological consequences of a progressively warmer Arctic.

Ecological Dynamics Across the Arctic Associated with Recent Climate Change. Eric Post, Mads C. Forchhammer, Syndonia Bret-Harte, Terry V. Callaghan, Torben R. Christensen, Bo Elberling, Anthony D. Fox, Olivier Gilg, David S. Hik, Toke T. Høye, Rolf A. Ims, Erik Jeppesen, David R. Klein, Jesper Madsen, A. David McGuire, Søren Rysgaard, Daniel E. Schindler, Ian Stirling, Mikkel P. Tamstorf, Nicholas J.C. Tyler, Rene van der Wal, Jeffrey Welker, Philip A. Wookey, Niels Martin Schmidt, Peter Aastrup. Science. Vol 325. 11 September. 2009.

Related articles on www.dmu.dk:

USA funding to study ecological effects of climate change in Greenland
Climate change leads to contrasting changes in duration of the growing season and species' life cycles
Global opvarmning giver større edderkopper (in Danish)
NERI is taking over the scientific coordination of the monitoring of climate effects in Greenland
Klimaændringerne vil medføre store forandringer i Nordøstgrønlands natur (in Danish)

Reindeer at Kangerlussuaq have not adjusted calving time to the earlier arrival of the plants in spring with negative consequences for the population. In other locations, e.g. Svalbard, the warmer winters have a positive influence on reindeer, as access to their source of plant food in winter has improved. Photo: Mads C. Forchhammer.
Volume 13 no. 15, 11 September 2009

 
 

Source: Danish Ministry of the Environment
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