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The response of Arctic vegetation to the summer climate: relation between shrub cover, NDVI, surface albedo and temperature

Blok, Daan LU ; Schaepman-Strub, Gabriela ; Bartholomeus, Harm ; Heijmans, Monique M P D ; Maximov, Trofim C and Berendse, Frank (2011) In Environmental Research Letters 6(3). p.035502-035502
Abstract
Recently observed Arctic greening trends from normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) data suggest that shrub growth is increasing in response to increasing summer temperature. An increase in shrub cover is expected to decrease summer albedo and thus positively feed back to climate warming. However, it is unknown how albedo and NDVI are affected by shrub cover and inter-annual variations in the summer climate. Here, we examine the relationship between deciduous shrub fractional cover, NDVI and albedo using field data collected at a tundra site in NE Siberia. Field data showed that NDVI increased and albedo decreased with increasing deciduous shrub cover. We then selected four Arctic tundra study areas and compiled annual growing... (More)
Recently observed Arctic greening trends from normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) data suggest that shrub growth is increasing in response to increasing summer temperature. An increase in shrub cover is expected to decrease summer albedo and thus positively feed back to climate warming. However, it is unknown how albedo and NDVI are affected by shrub cover and inter-annual variations in the summer climate. Here, we examine the relationship between deciduous shrub fractional cover, NDVI and albedo using field data collected at a tundra site in NE Siberia. Field data showed that NDVI increased and albedo decreased with increasing deciduous shrub cover. We then selected four Arctic tundra study areas and compiled annual growing season maximum NDVI and minimum albedo maps from MODIS satellite data (2000–10) and related these satellite products to tundra vegetation types (shrub, graminoid, barren and wetland tundra) and regional summer temperature. We observed that maximum NDVI was greatest in shrub tundra and that inter-annual variation was negatively related to summer minimum albedo but showed no consistent relationship with summer temperature. Shrub tundra showed higher albedo than wetland and barren tundra in all four study areas. These results suggest that a northwards shift of shrub tundra might not lead to a decrease in summer minimum albedo during the snow-free season when replacing wetland tundra. A fully integrative study is however needed to link results from satellite data with in situ observations across the Arctic to test the effect of increasing shrub cover on summer albedo in different tundra vegetation types. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; ; ; ; and
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Environmental Research Letters
volume
6
issue
3
pages
1 pages
publisher
IOP Publishing
external identifiers
  • scopus:80053499560
ISSN
1748-9326
DOI
10.1088/1748-9326/6/3/035502
language
English
LU publication?
no
id
a7ca2270-f2e1-40fd-806b-d3b0b5d3d504
alternative location
http://stacks.iop.org/1748-9326/6/i=3/a=035502
date added to LUP
2016-08-26 10:02:02
date last changed
2022-06-21 14:23:46
@article{a7ca2270-f2e1-40fd-806b-d3b0b5d3d504,
  abstract     = {{Recently observed Arctic greening trends from normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) data suggest that shrub growth is increasing in response to increasing summer temperature. An increase in shrub cover is expected to decrease summer albedo and thus positively feed back to climate warming. However, it is unknown how albedo and NDVI are affected by shrub cover and inter-annual variations in the summer climate. Here, we examine the relationship between deciduous shrub fractional cover, NDVI and albedo using field data collected at a tundra site in NE Siberia. Field data showed that NDVI increased and albedo decreased with increasing deciduous shrub cover. We then selected four Arctic tundra study areas and compiled annual growing season maximum NDVI and minimum albedo maps from MODIS satellite data (2000–10) and related these satellite products to tundra vegetation types (shrub, graminoid, barren and wetland tundra) and regional summer temperature. We observed that maximum NDVI was greatest in shrub tundra and that inter-annual variation was negatively related to summer minimum albedo but showed no consistent relationship with summer temperature. Shrub tundra showed higher albedo than wetland and barren tundra in all four study areas. These results suggest that a northwards shift of shrub tundra might not lead to a decrease in summer minimum albedo during the snow-free season when replacing wetland tundra. A fully integrative study is however needed to link results from satellite data with in situ observations across the Arctic to test the effect of increasing shrub cover on summer albedo in different tundra vegetation types.}},
  author       = {{Blok, Daan and Schaepman-Strub, Gabriela and Bartholomeus, Harm and Heijmans, Monique M P D and Maximov, Trofim C and Berendse, Frank}},
  issn         = {{1748-9326}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{3}},
  pages        = {{035502--035502}},
  publisher    = {{IOP Publishing}},
  series       = {{Environmental Research Letters}},
  title        = {{The response of Arctic vegetation to the summer climate: relation between shrub cover, NDVI, surface albedo and temperature}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/6/3/035502}},
  doi          = {{10.1088/1748-9326/6/3/035502}},
  volume       = {{6}},
  year         = {{2011}},
}