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北极亚寒带灌丛的树木入侵与局部增加的积雪和功能性土壤深度相互作用:德纳里国家公园的案例研究

Tree Invasions of Subarctic Shrublands Interact With Locally Augmented Snow and Functional Soil Depths: A Case Study in Denali National Park.

作者信息

Albrigtsen Johanne O, Stehn Sarah E, Roland Carl, Allen Scott T

机构信息

Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Science University of Nevada Reno Reno Nevada USA.

Graduate Program of Hydrologic Sciences University of Nevada Reno Reno Nevada USA.

出版信息

Ecol Evol. 2025 Aug 19;15(8):e71974. doi: 10.1002/ece3.71974. eCollection 2025 Aug.

Abstract

Land-cover changes and new ecosystem trajectories in Interior Alaska have altered the structure and function of landscapes, with regional warming trends altering carbon and water cycling. Notably, these changes include the increased distribution of tall woody vegetation, trees and shrubs, in landscapes that historically only supported low shrub vegetation cover. In Denali National Park, Alaska, this phenomenon has altered primary succession pathways towards tundra ecosystems with the establishment and expansion of balsam poplar () trees. In this study, we examine how snow, soil, and vegetation processes interact within this altered successional pathway towards further landscape change following glacial recession. In a sequence of outflow terraces, we found that variations in snow depth, functional soil depth, leaf area index, overstory height, and understory height were all significantly correlated with each other, with those effects largely explained by the presence of poplar. Poplar-dominated plots had deeper snowpacks, deeper functional soil depths, taller overstory and shrub heights, and greater LAI than in non-poplar plots of the same landscape age. These findings suggest a feedback cycle where the establishment of taller vegetation (here, poplar) alters ecosystem processes in the following notable ways: taller vegetation is able to trap more snow by reducing wind exposure and limiting sublimation; this snow provides water through additional snowmelt and insulation, keeping soils warmer and lessening permafrost development, leading to deeper functional soil depths. This feedback demonstrates poplar's ability to modify the environment as an ecosystem engineer, engineering a trajectory away from the otherwise expected permafrost-underlain tundra.

摘要

阿拉斯加内陆地区的土地覆盖变化和新的生态系统轨迹改变了景观的结构和功能,区域变暖趋势改变了碳循环和水循环。值得注意的是,这些变化包括高大木本植被(树木和灌木)在历史上仅支持低灌木植被覆盖的景观中的分布增加。在阿拉斯加的德纳里国家公园,这种现象随着香脂杨()树的建立和扩张,改变了苔原生态系统的初级演替路径。在本研究中,我们研究了在冰川消退后这种改变的演替路径中,雪、土壤和植被过程如何相互作用,以进一步推动景观变化。在一系列流出阶地中,我们发现雪深、功能土壤深度、叶面积指数、上层高度和下层高度的变化彼此之间都显著相关,这些影响在很大程度上可以由杨树的存在来解释。与相同景观年龄的非杨树地块相比,以杨树为主的地块有更深的积雪、更深的功能土壤深度、更高的上层和灌木高度以及更大的叶面积指数。这些发现表明了一个反馈循环,即更高大植被(这里是杨树)的建立以以下显著方式改变生态系统过程:更高大的植被能够通过减少风的暴露和限制升华来捕获更多的雪;这些雪通过额外的融雪和隔热提供水分,使土壤保持温暖并减少多年冻土的发育,从而导致更深的功能土壤深度。这种反馈证明了杨树作为生态系统工程师改变环境的能力,设计了一条远离原本预期的永久冻土下伏苔原的轨迹。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/d73c/12362170/27dd9d8847fb/ECE3-15-e71974-g001.jpg

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