|
Warming
Climate May Cause Arctic Tundra To Burn
Wednesday, March 5, 2008
Montana
State University researcher Philip Higuera examines a lake
sediment core (the long brown object in front of his knees)
from Little Isacheluich Lake in the Noatak National Preserve
in the western Brooks Range of Alaska in June 2007. The
sediment sample is similar to those Higuera examined for his
research into fire occurrence on the ancient tundra.
|
Credit:
Melissa Chipman
Research from ancient
sediment cores indicates that a warming climate could make the
world's arctic tundra far more susceptible to fires than
previously thought.
The findings, published today (Wed.,
March 5) in the on-line journal, Public Library of Science ONE,
are important given the potential for tundra fires to release
organic carbon - which could add significantly to the amount of
greenhouse gases already blamed for global warming.
Montana
State University post-doctoral researcher Philip Higuera is the
lead author on the paper, which summarizes a portion of a
four-year study funded by the National Science Foundation.
Higuera and his co-authors examined ancient sediments
from four lakes in a remote region of Alaska in and around Gates
of the Arctic National Park to determine what kind of vegetation
existed in the area after the last ice age, 14,000 to 9,000 years
ago.
By looking at fossilized pollen grains in the
sediment cores, Higuera and his co-authors determined that after
the last ice age, the arctic tundra was very different from what
it is now. Instead of being covered with grasses, herbs, and
short shrubs, it was covered with vast expanses of tall birch
shrubs.
Charcoal preserved in the sediment cores also
showed evidence that those shrub expanses burned - frequently.
"This was a surprise," Higuera said. "Modern
tundra burns so infrequently that we don't really have a good
idea of how often tundra can burn. Best estimates for the most
flammable tundra regions are that it burns once every 250-plus
years."
The ancient sediment cores showed the shrub
tundra burned as frequently as modern boreal forests in Alaska -
every 140 years on average, but with some fires spaced only 30
years apart.
Higuera's research is important because
other evidence indicates that as the climate has warmed in the
past 50 to 100 years, shrubs have expanded across the world's
tundra regions.
"There is evidence of increasing
shrub biomass in modern tundra ecosystems, and we expect
temperatures to continue to increase and overall moisture levels
to decrease. Combine these two factors and it suggests a greater
potential for fires," Higuera said. "The sediment cores
indicate that it's happened before."
The world's high
latitude tundra and boreal forest ecosystems contain roughly 30
percent of the planet's total soil carbon. Currently, much of the
carbon is locked in permafrost. But a warming climate could cause
the permafrost to melt and release its carbon stores into the
atmosphere where it would contribute to the greenhouse effect.
"Vegetation change through an increase in shrub
biomass and more frequent burning will change a great deal of the
carbon cycle in these high latitudes," Higuera said. "We
don't fully understand the implications, except that it's
reasonable to expect that carbon that was previously locked up
could enter the atmosphere."
The paper is the first
in a series Higuera expects to publish from his field work.
Future papers will examine how climate, vegetation, and fire
regimes have interacted over the past 15,000 years in the
region.
Higuera was assisted in his research by MSU
undergraduate Alison Kennedy, who graduated in from Earth
Sciences in 2007 and co-authors Linda Brubaker and Patricia
Anderson from the University of Washington, Thomas Brown from
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, and Feng Sheng Hu from
the University of Illinois. A National Parks Ecological Research
Fellow, Higuera works in the Paleoecology Lab led by MSU
professor Cathy Whitlock.
Higuera's paper "Fires in
Ancient Shrub Tundra: Implications of Paleorecords for Arctic
Environmental Change" is available online at
http://www.plosone.org/doi/pone.0001744 in the open-access
journal PLoS One www.plosone.org
Source:
Montana State University

|
Scientific
Frontline®
The
Comm Center
Space
Weather Alerts
Stellar
Nights®
The
E.A.R.®
World
Report News
Photo,
Sketches, & Video Gallery
Scientific
Frontline®
Is
supported in part by “Readers Like You”
|