2021
DOI: 10.1101/2021.06.10.447955
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Towards rainy high Arctic winters: how ice-encasement impacts tundra plant phenology, productivity and reproduction

Abstract: The Arctic is the most rapidly warming region on Earth, but our understanding of ecosystem impacts is still poor. For instance, warming occurs more than twice as fast in winter than in summer, yet long-term tundra vegetation studies have almost exclusively focused on effects of the latter. In winter, more frequent extreme warm spells and associated rain-on-snow events can dramatically alter snowpack conditions and even encapsulate the vegetation in basal ice for several months. Such icing effects on plant phen… Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
(1 citation statement)
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“…For instance, the winter season is warming more than the summer season and the frequency of extreme winter events, such as warm spells with rain on snow, are increasing (ACIA 2005;IPCC 2018;Walsh et al 2020;Panchen et al 2022). As an example, Le Moullec et al (2019) describe a factorial experiment that combines summer warming with OTCs and winter icing events (rain on snow) at a site on Svalbard. Greater frequency and duration of icing events can damage and eliminate vegetation, and restrict access to forage for herbivores.…”
Section: Multiple Climate Drivers and Extreme Eventsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For instance, the winter season is warming more than the summer season and the frequency of extreme winter events, such as warm spells with rain on snow, are increasing (ACIA 2005;IPCC 2018;Walsh et al 2020;Panchen et al 2022). As an example, Le Moullec et al (2019) describe a factorial experiment that combines summer warming with OTCs and winter icing events (rain on snow) at a site on Svalbard. Greater frequency and duration of icing events can damage and eliminate vegetation, and restrict access to forage for herbivores.…”
Section: Multiple Climate Drivers and Extreme Eventsmentioning
confidence: 99%