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Transitions in high-Arctic vegetation growth patterns and ecosystem productivity tracked with automated cameras from 2000 to 2013
Authors:Andreas Westergaard-Nielsen  Magnus Lund  Stine Højlund Pedersen  Niels Martin Schmidt  Stephen Klosterman  Jakob Abermann  Birger Ulf Hansen
Institution:1.Department of Geosciences and Natural Resource Management,University of Copenhagen,Copenhagen,Denmark;2.Center for Permafrost (CENPERM),University of Copenhagen,Copenhagen,Denmark;3.Department for Bioscience,Arctic Research Centre, Aarhus University,Roskilde,Denmark;4.Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology,Harvard University,Cambridge,USA;5.Greenland Survey, Asiaq, Svend Jungep Aqqutaa 8,Nuuk,Greenland
Abstract:Climate-induced changes in vegetation phenology at northern latitudes are still poorly understood. Continued monitoring and research are therefore needed to improve the understanding of abiotic drivers. Here we used 14 years of time lapse imagery and climate data from high-Arctic Northeast Greenland to assess the seasonal response of a dwarf shrub heath, grassland, and fen, to inter-annual variation in snow-cover, soil moisture, and air and soil temperatures. A late snow melt and start of growing season is counterbalanced by a fast greenup and a tendency to higher peak greenness values. Snow water equivalents and soil moisture explained up to 77 % of growing season duration and senescence phase, highlighting that water availability is a prominent driver in the heath site, rather than temperatures. We found a significant advance in the start of spring by 10 days and in the end of fall by 11 days, resulting in an unchanged growing season length. Vegetation greenness, derived from the imagery, was correlated to primary productivity, showing that the imagery holds valuable information on vegetation productivity.
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