Vegetation is responding to climate change, which is especially prominent in the Arctic. Vegetation change is manifest in different ways and varies regionally, depending on the characteristics of the investigated area. Although vegetation in some Arctic areas has been thoroughly investigated, central Chukotka (NE Siberia) with its highly diverse vegetation, mountainous landscape and deciduous needle-leaf treeline remains poorly explored, despite showing strong greening in remote-sensing products. Here we quantify recent vegetation compositional changes in central Chukotka over 15 years between 2000/2001/2002 and 2016/2017. We numerically related field-derived information on foliage projective cover (percentage cover) of different plant taxa from 52 vegetation plots to remote-sensing derived (Landsat) spectral indices (Normalised Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI), Normalised Difference Water Index (NDWI) and Normalised Difference Snow Index (NDSI)) using constrained ordination. Clustering of ordination scores resulted in four land-cover classes: (1) larch closed-canopy forest, (2) forest tundra and shrub tundra, (3) graminoid tundra and (4) prostrate herb tundra and barren areas. We produced land-cover maps for early (2000, 2001 or 2002) and recent (2016 or 2017) time-slices for four focus regions along the tundra-taiga vegetation gradient. Transition from graminoid tundra to forest tundra and shrub tundra is interpreted as shrubification and amounts to 20% area increase in the tundra-taiga zone and 40% area increase in the northern taiga. Major contributors of shrubification are alder, dwarf birch and some species of the heather family. Land-cover change from the forest tundra and shrub tundra class to the larch closed-canopy forest class is interpreted as tree infilling and is notable in the northern taiga. We find almost no land-cover changes in the present treeless tundra.
Lakes cover large parts of the climatically sensitive Arctic landscape and respond rapidly to environmental change. Arctic lakes have different origins and include the predominant thermokarst lakes, which are small, young and highly dynamic, as well as large, old and stable glacial lakes. Freshwater diatoms dominate the primary producer community in these lakes and can be used to detect biotic responses to climate and environmental change. We used specific diatom metabarcoding on sedimentary DNA, combined with next-generation sequencing and diatom morphology, to assess diatom diversity in five glacial and 15 thermokarst lakes within the easternmost expanse of the Siberian treeline ecotone in Chukotka, Russia. We obtained 163 verified diatom Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (
Abstract. Upscaling plant biomass distribution and dynamics is
essential for estimating carbon stocks and carbon balance. In this respect,
the Russian Far East is among the least investigated sub-Arctic regions
despite its known vegetation sensitivity to ongoing warming. We
representatively harvested above-ground biomass (AGB; separated by dominant
taxa) at 40 sampling plots in central Chukotka. We used ordination to relate
field-based taxa projective cover and Landsat-derived vegetation indices. A
general additive model was used to link the ordination scores to AGB. We
then mapped AGB for paired Landsat-derived time slices (i.e. 2000/2001/2002
and 2016/2017), in four study regions covering a wide vegetation gradient
from closed-canopy larch forests to barren alpine tundra. We provide AGB
estimates and changes in AGB that were previously lacking for central
Chukotka at a high spatial resolution and a detailed description of
taxonomical contributions. Generally, AGB in the study region ranges from 0
to 16 kg m−2, with Cajander larch providing the highest contribution.
Comparison of changes in AGB within the investigated period shows that the
greatest changes (up to 1.25 kg m−2 yr−1) occurred in the northern
taiga and in areas where land cover changed to larch closed-canopy forest.
As well as the notable changes, increases in AGB also occur within the land-cover classes. Our estimations indicate a general increase in total AGB
throughout the investigated tundra–taiga and northern taiga, whereas the
tundra showed no evidence of change in AGB.
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