Environmental Research Letters (Jan 2018)

Tundra shrub effects on growing season energy and carbon dioxide exchange

  • Peter M Lafleur,
  • Elyn R Humphreys

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/aab863
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 5
p. 055001

Abstract

Read online

Increased shrub cover on the Arctic tundra is expected to impact ecosystem-atmosphere exchanges of carbon and energy resulting in feedbacks to the climate system, yet few direct measurements of shrub tundra-atmosphere exchanges are available to corroborate expectations. Here we present energy and carbon dioxide (CO _2 ) fluxes measured using the eddy covariance technique over six growing seasons at three closely located tundra sites in Canada’s Low Arctic. The sites are dominated by the tundra shrub Betula glandulosa , but percent cover varies from 17%–60% and average shrub height ranges from 18–59 cm among sites. The site with greatest percent cover and height had greater snow accumulation, but contrary to some expectations, it had similar late-winter albedo and snow melt dates compared to the other two sites. Immediately after snowmelt latent heat fluxes increased more slowly at this site compared to the others. Yet by the end of the growing season there was little difference in cumulative latent heat flux among the sites, suggesting evapotranspiration was not increased with greater shrub cover. In contrast, lower albedo and less soil thaw contributed to greater summer sensible heat flux at the site with greatest shrub cover, resulting in greater total atmospheric heating. Net ecosystem exchange of CO _2 revealed the potential for enhanced carbon cycling rates under greater shrub cover. Spring CO _2 emissions were greatest at the site with greatest percent cover of shrubs, as was summer net uptake of CO _2 . The seasonal net sink for CO _2 was ~2 times larger at the site with the greatest shrub cover compared to the site with the least shrub cover. These results largely agree with expectations that the growing season feedback to the atmosphere arising from shrub expansion in the Arctic has the potential to be negative for CO _2 fluxes but positive for turbulent energy fluxes.

Keywords