4.1 Review

Five decades of terrestrial and freshwater research at Ny-?lesund, Svalbard

期刊

POLAR RESEARCH
卷 41, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

OPEN ACADEMIA AB
DOI: 10.33265/polar.v41.6310

关键词

Biogeochemical cycles; climate change; ecosystem structure and functioning; environmental change; High Arctic; human impacts; soil

资金

  1. Svalbard Science Forum
  2. Norwegian Research Council [ES610235, 300103]
  3. Chinese Arctic and Antarctic Administration and Polar Research Institute of China
  4. Belgium (Belgian Science Policy Office [BELSPRO]) [BR/175/A1/CLIMARCTIC-BE]
  5. Germany (German Research Foundation [DFG]) [KA899/33-1]
  6. Norway (Research Council of Norway) [270252/E50]
  7. Spain (Ministry of Science, Innovation, and Universities of Spain [MINECO]) [PCIN2016-001, CTM2016-79741]
  8. DFG priority programme 1158 Antarctic Research [KA899/30-14]
  9. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [16H05622]
  10. National Institute of Polar Research [KP-309]
  11. Korea Polar Research Institute [PE21450]
  12. Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports of the Czech Republic (Czech-Indian Cooperative Scientific Research) [ltain19139]
  13. institutional long-term research plan of the Institute of Botany of the Czech Academy of Sciences [RVO67985939]
  14. Natural Environment Research Council
  15. Natural Environment Research Council (UK)National Commission for Scientific and Technological Research (National Commission for Scientific and Technological Research [CONICYT]
  16. Chile [NE/P003079/1]
  17. Carlsberg Foundation [CF18-0267]
  18. Netherlands Polar Programme
  19. Nordomradene og Russland (NORRUSS) programme [233645/H30]
  20. Svalbard Science Forum [246113/E10, 256933/E10]
  21. Norwegian Institute for Nature Research
  22. NPI
  23. National Polar Long-term Observation Program of China (NaPLO)
  24. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41271222]
  25. Research Council of Norway
  26. Research Council of Norway independent projects support (FRIPRO) Mobility Grant Project Time and Energy [251027/RU]
  27. European Research Council [606895]
  28. Tromso Research Foundation Starting Grant [16_SG_ATT]
  29. Research Council of Norway [287402]
  30. Research Council Norway [276080, 223257, 280843]
  31. Norwegian University of Science and Technology
  32. University of Groningen
  33. Uarctic Research Chairship
  34. UiT The Arctic University of Norway
  35. University of Oslo
  36. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [16H05622] Funding Source: KAKEN

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Research conducted at Ny-Alesund in Svalbard, Norway for over 50 years has aimed to understand the structure and functioning of High Arctic ecosystems and the impacts of environmental change. The research has identified negative effects of climate change on biodiversity and ecosystem processes, while highlighting knowledge gaps for smaller organisms and ecosystem-level processes. To fill these gaps, recommendations include long-term ecosystem-based monitoring, mechanistic understanding of environmental change impacts, studying trophic interactions and cascades, and integrating long-term data on microbial communities and nutrient fluxes.
For more than five decades, research has been conducted at Ny-Alesund, in Svalbard, Norway, to understand the structure and functioning of High Arctic ecosystems and the profound impacts on them of environmental change. Terrestrial, freshwater, glacial and marine ecosystems are accessible year-round from Ny-Alesund, providing unique opportunities for interdisciplinary observational and experimental studies along physical, chemical, hydrological and climatic gradients. Here, we synthesize terrestrial and freshwater research at Ny-Alesund and review current knowledge of biodiversity patterns, species population dynamics and interactions, ecosystem processes, biogeochemical cycles and anthropogenic impacts. There is now strong evidence of past and ongoing biotic changes caused by climate change, including negative effects on populations of many taxa and impacts of rain-on-snow events across multiple trophic levels. While species-level characteristics and responses are well understood for macro-organisms, major knowledge gaps exist for microbes, invertebrates and ecosystem-level processes. In order to fill current knowledge gaps, we recommend (1) maintaining monitoring efforts, while establishing a longterm ecosystem-based monitoring programme; (2) gaining a mechanistic understanding of environmental change impacts on processes and linkages in food webs; (3) identifying trophic interactions and cascades across ecosystems; and (4) integrating long-term data on microbial, invertebrate and freshwater communities, along with measurements of carbon and nutrient fluxes among soils, atmosphere, freshwaters and the marine environment. The synthesis here shows that the Ny-Alesund study system has the characteristics needed to fill these gaps in knowledge, thereby enhancing our understanding of High-Arctic ecosystems and their responses to environmental variability and change.

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