Repository logo

Infoscience

  • English
  • French
Log In
Logo EPFL, École polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne

Infoscience

  • English
  • French
Log In
  1. Home
  2. Academic and Research Output
  3. Journal articles
  4. Climate change and Arctic ecosystems: 2. Modeling, paleodata-model comparisons, and future projections
 
Loading...
Thumbnail Image
research article

Climate change and Arctic ecosystems: 2. Modeling, paleodata-model comparisons, and future projections

Kaplan, J. O.  
•
Bigelow, N. H.
•
Prentice, I. C.
Show more
2003
Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres

Large variations in the composition, structure, and function of Arctic ecosystems are determined by climatic gradients, especially of growing-season warmth, soil moisture, and snow cover. A unified circumpolar classification recognizing five types of tundra was developed. The geographic distributions of vegetation types north of 55degreesN, including the position of the forest limit and the distributions of the tundra types, could be predicted from climatology using a small set of plant functional types embedded in the biogeochemistry-biogeography model BIOME4. Several palaeoclimate simulations for the last glacial maximum (LGM) and mid-Holocene were used to explore the possibility of simulating past vegetation patterns, which are independently known based on pollen data. The broad outlines of observed changes in vegetation were captured. LGM simulations showed the major reduction of forest, the great extension of graminoid and forb tundra, and the restriction of low- and high-shrub tundra (although not all models produced sufficiently dry conditions to mimic the full observed change). Mid-Holocene simulations reproduced the contrast between northward forest extension in western and central Siberia and stability of the forest limit in Beringia. Projection of the effect of a continued exponential increase in atmospheric CO2 concentration, based on a transient ocean-atmosphere simulation including sulfate aerosol effects, suggests a potential for larger changes in Arctic ecosystems during the 21st century than have occurred between mid-Holocene and present. Simulated physiological effects of the CO2 increase (to >700 ppm) at high latitudes were slight compared with the effects of the change in climate.

  • Details
  • Metrics
Type
research article
DOI
10.1029/2002JD002559
Author(s)
Kaplan, J. O.  
•
Bigelow, N. H.
•
Prentice, I. C.
•
Harrison, S. P.
•
Bartlein, P. J.
•
Christensen, T. R.
•
Cramer, W.
•
Matveyeva, N. V.
•
McGuire, A. D.
•
Murray, D. F.
Show more
Date Issued

2003

Published in
Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres
Volume

108

Issue

D19

Article Number

8171

Subjects

tundra

•

biome

•

vegetation modeling

•

biogeography

•

ice age

•

mammoths

•

Last glacial maximum

•

general-circulation model

•

6000 years bp

•

plant

•

functional types

•

net primary production

•

laurentide ice-sheet

•

sea-ice

•

northern eurasia

•

pollen data

•

intercomparison project

Note

Review

Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

OTHER

EPFL units
ECOS  
ARVE  
Available on Infoscience
February 22, 2008
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/18954
Logo EPFL, École polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne
  • Contact
  • infoscience@epfl.ch

  • Follow us on Facebook
  • Follow us on Instagram
  • Follow us on LinkedIn
  • Follow us on X
  • Follow us on Youtube
AccessibilityLegal noticePrivacy policyCookie settingsEnd User AgreementGet helpFeedback

Infoscience is a service managed and provided by the Library and IT Services of EPFL. © EPFL, tous droits réservés