5.9. Arctic and Alpine Ecosystems
Arctic and alpine ecosystems are characterized by low human population densities.
However, they provide important goods and services locally and globally. At
the local scale, they are the resource base of many indigenous cultures and
provide recreation, food, and fiber to people in adjacent regions. At the global
level, arctic and boreal regions play an important role in the world's
climate system. They contain 40% of the world's reactive soil carbon (McGuire
et al., 1995); influence global heat transport through their impact on regional
water and energy exchange with the atmosphere; and determine freshwater input
to the Arctic Ocean, which influences bottom-water formation and thermohaline
circulation of the oceans. Alpine regions are important sources of freshwater
and hydropower for surrounding lowlands. Changes in these goods and services
would have socioeconomic impacts throughout the world.
Chapter 16 presents information on the effects of climate
on the physical environment of polar regions. The impacts of climate change
on high-mountain systems and arctic tundra are extensively reviewed in the SAR
by Beniston and Fox (1996) and Allen-Diaz (1996), respectively. This section
emphasizes the effects of climatic change particularly on ecosystem production,
carbon stores, biodiversity, and water flowwhich, in turn, can affect
the productivity especially of alpine ecosystems.
5.9.1. State and Trends of Goods and Services
5.9.1.1. Arctic Ecosystems
Arctic and alpine tundra each occupy 4 million km2 (Körner,
1999). Approximately 25% of the tundra is ice-covered, 25% shrub-dominated,
and the rest dominated by herbaceous plants. Soil carbon stocks in boreal and
tundra peatlands are large (see Sections 5.6 and 5.8).
High-latitude warming that has occurred in the Arctic region since the 1960s
(Chapman and Walsh, 1993; Serreze et al., 2000) is consistent with simulations
of climate models that predict increased greenhouse forcing (Kattenberg et al.,
1996). Climatic change has been regionally variable, with cooling in northeastern
North America and warming in northwestern North America and northern Siberia.
The warming results from a change in the frequency of circulation modes rather
than gradual warming (Palmer, 1999). Precipitation (P) and surface evaporation
(E) have increased at high latitudes, with no significant temporal trend in
the balance between the two (P-E) (Serreze et al., 2000).
Permafrost underlies 20-25% of the northern hemisphere land area (Brown
et al., 1997a). Ice that forms during periods of cold climate frequently constitutes
a high proportion (20-30%) of the volume of these frozen soils (Brown et
al., 1997a). Consequently, melting of permafrost can lead to surface collapse
of soils forming thermokarst, an irregular topography of mounds, pits, troughs,
and depressions that may or may not be filled with water, depending on topography.
Permafrost temperatures have warmed in western North America by 2-4°C
from 1940 to 1980 (Lachenbruch and Marshall, 1986) and in Siberia by 0.6-0.7°C
from 1970 to 1990 (Pavlov, 1994), whereas permafrost cooled in northeastern
Canada (Wang and Allard, 1995)patterns that roughly parallel recent trends
in air temperature. However, the magnitude of warming and patterns of interannual
variation (roughly 10-year oscillations) in permafrost temperatures are not
readily explained as a simple response to regional warming (Osterkamp et al.,
1994). Changes in permafrost regime probably reflect undocumented changes in
the thickness or thermal conductance of snow or vegetation, in addition to changes
in air temperature (Osterkamp and Romanovsky, 1999). Thermokarst features are
developing actively in the zone of discontinuous permafrost (Osterkamp and Romanovsky,
1999), particularly in association with fire and human disturbance, but there
are no long-term records from which to detect trends in the regional frequency
of thermokarst.
In contrast to the long-term trend in tundra carbon accumulation during the
Holocene, flux measurements in Alaska suggest that recent warming may have converted
tundra from a net carbon sink to a source of as much as 0.7 Gt C yr-1
(Oechel et al., 1993; Oechel and Vourlitis, 1994). The direction and magnitude
of the response of carbon exchange to warming may be regionally variable, depending
on climate, topography, and disturbance regime (Zimov et al., 1999, McGuire
et al., 2000). During recent decades, peak-to-trough amplitude in the seasonal
cycle of atmospheric CO2 concentrations has increased, and the phase
has advanced at arctic and subarctic CO2 observation stations north
of 55°N (Keeling et al., 1996). This change in carbon dynamics in the atmosphere
probably reflects some combination of increased uptake during the first half
of the growing season (Randerson et al., 1999), increased winter efflux (Chapin
et al., 1996), and increased seasonality of carbon exchange associated with
disturbance (Zimov et al., 1999). This "inverse" approach generally
has concluded that mid-northern latitudes were a net carbon sink during the
1980s and early 1990s (Tans et al., 1990; Ciais et al., 1995; Fan et al., 1998;
Bousquet et al., 1999; Rayner et al., 1999). At high northern latitudes, these
models give a wider range of estimates, with some analyses pointing to a net
source (Ciais et al., 1995; Fan et al., 1998) and others to a sink (Bousquet
et al., 1999; Rayner et al., 1999).
High-latitude wetlands and lakes account for 5-10% of global CH4
fluxes to the atmosphere (Reeburgh and Whalen, 1992). These fluxes increase
dramatically with thermokarst (Zimov et al., 1997), acting as a potentially
important positive feedback to global warming.
Satellite imagery suggests an increase in NDVI (a measure of "greenness")
from 1981 to 1991 (Myneni et al., 1997), although interpretation is complicated
by changes in sensor calibration (Fung, 1997). If these changes in satellite
imagery are an accurate reflection of vegetation activity, changes in NDVI could
help explain the increase in seasonal amplitude in atmospheric CO2 observed
at high northern latitudes (Keeling et al., 1996; Randerson et al., 1999). This
also is consistent with the increased biomass of shrubs in the arctic tundra
(Chapin et al., 1995).
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