4.5 Article

Plant-Environment Interactions in the Low Arctic Torngat Mountains of Labrador

Journal

ECOSYSTEMS
Volume 24, Issue 5, Pages 1038-1058

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10021-020-00577-6

Keywords

Shrubification; Permafrost; Climate change; Environmental change; Dendroecology; NDVI; Remote sensing

Categories

Funding

  1. Inuit of Nunatsiavut, Nunavik
  2. Cooperative Management Board of Torngat Mountains National Park
  3. ArcticNet
  4. Canadian Foundation for Innovation
  5. Labrador Institute
  6. Memorial University of Newfoundland
  7. NSERC
  8. Nunatsiavut Government
  9. Parks Canada
  10. Queen's University
  11. Royal Canadian Geographical Society
  12. University of Ottawa
  13. W. Garfield Weston Foundation

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The study reveals that the eastern Canadian Subarctic and Arctic are undergoing significant environmental changes with profound impact on local ecological and geomorphological systems. The area has experienced a significant greening trend over the past four decades, attributed to rapid growth of shrubs starting from the late 1990s and matching warmer temperatures. In wet areas, plant canopy height has an insulating effect on winter ground surface temperatures, and the presence of near-surface discontinuous permafrost may limit plant growth in certain areas.
The eastern Canadian Subarctic and Arctic are experiencing significant environmental change with widespread implications for the people, plants, and animals living there. In this study, we integrate 10 years of research at the Nakvak Brook watershed in Torngat Mountains National Park of Canada, northern Labrador, to assess the sensitivity of ecological and geomorphological systems to regional climate warming. A time series of the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index indicates that the area has undergone a significant greening trend over the past four decades. Analyses of shrub cross sections suggest that greening has been caused by a combination of rapid establishment and growth that began in the late 1990's and coincided with warmer growing season temperatures. Recent (2010-2015) vegetation change has been subtle and heavily moderated by soil moisture status. Plant canopy height is greater in wet areas and has an insulating effect on ground surface temperatures during the winter, a consequence of snow trapping by shrub canopies. Observations of subsurface conditions indicate that the study site is best characterized as having discontinuous near-surface permafrost. The importance of subsurface conditions for above-ground vegetation depends on the geomorphological context, with plants in wet areas underlain by fine materials being the most likely to be growth-limited by permafrost, thus being potential hot-spots for future change. With the expectation of sustained climate change, loss of adjacent sea ice, and proximity to the forest-tundra ecotone, it is likely that the Torngat Mountains will continue to be an area of rapid environmental change in the coming decades.

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