4.7 Article

Plant functional type aboveground biomass change within Alaska and northwest Canada mapped using a 35-year satellite time series from 1985 to 2020

期刊

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS
卷 17, 期 11, 页码 -

出版社

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/ac9d50

关键词

plant functional type; aboveground biomass; Landsat; remote sensing; tundra; UAV; fire

资金

  1. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship
  2. NASA [NNX17AE44G, 80NSSC19M0112, 80NSSC21K1364]
  3. Arizona's Technology and Research Initiative Fund

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Changes in vegetation distribution in the Arctic and boreal regions, driven by climate warming and fire disturbance, have wide-ranging impacts. A study mapped live aboveground biomass for five plant functional types. The results showed increases in deciduous and evergreen shrub biomass, and decreases in graminoid and lichen biomass, with fire being an important driver of these changes.
Changes in vegetation distribution are underway in Arctic and boreal regions due to climate warming and associated fire disturbance. These changes have wide ranging downstream impacts-affecting wildlife habitat, nutrient cycling, climate feedbacks and fire regimes. It is thus critical to understand where these changes are occurring and what types of vegetation are affected, and to quantify the magnitude of the changes. In this study, we mapped live aboveground biomass for five common plant functional types (PFTs; deciduous shrubs, evergreen shrubs, forbs, graminoids and lichens) within Alaska and northwest Canada, every five years from 1985 to 2020. We employed a multi-scale approach, scaling from field harvest data and unmanned aerial vehicle-based biomass predictions to produce wall-to-wall maps based on climatological, topographic, phenological and Landsat spectral predictors. We found deciduous shrub and graminoid biomass were predicted best among PFTs. Our time-series analyses show increases in deciduous (37%) and evergreen shrub (7%) biomass, and decreases in graminoid (14%) and lichen (13%) biomass over a study area of approximately 500 000 km(2). Fire was an important driver of recent changes in the study area, with the largest changes in biomass associated with historic fire perimeters. Decreases in lichen and graminoid biomass often corresponded with increasing shrub biomass. These findings illustrate the driving trends in vegetation change within the Arctic/boreal region. Understanding these changes and the impacts they in turn will have on Arctic and boreal ecosystems will be critical to understanding the trajectory of climate change in the region.

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