
Plant communities in the Arctic are changing along with the climate, study finds
CBC
A recent study has found that climate change is altering Arctic plant communities, with some species declining in response to warmer temperatures, while others flourish.
The study, published in the journal Nature last week, looked at over 2,000 plant communities across the Canadian Arctic, Alaska, and Scandinavia over the course of four decades.
Fifty-four researchers from 50 different institutions collaborated on the project. They found that although the number of plant species across the 45 study sites remained the same over time, the species of plants found at each site changed, with plant turnover increasing due to climate change.
"So around 60 per cent of the plots … experience this sort of turnover, this change in the abundance of the species and exactly which species are growing within those plots," said Isla Myers-Smith, one of the paper's authors.
"And one of the types of changes that was going on across all these sites was that some sites we are gaining species and other sites we are losing species."
Sites that underwent more warming over the course of the study gained new species, said Myers-Smith. However, certain species that responded well to warming temperatures, caused declines in others.
Shrubs have become a dominant species at many of the study sites, but due to their height, shrubs push out shorter species by limiting their access to sunlight.
Myers-Smith, a global change ecologist at the University of British Columbia, began managing one of the study sites in the Yukon's Herschel Island-Qikiqtaruk Territorial Park in 2009. She and her team have been monitoring plant diversity and abundance on the island ever since.
"I get to go each summer up to Qikiqtaruk and we monitor the plots in the end of July, fighting the mosquitoes to collect these really valuable data on how ecosystems are changing."
In Qikiqtaruk, Myers-Smith and her team found that species of shrubs, sedges and particularly, grasses increased over time, while lichen decreased. This ecosystem shift could impact other wildlife on the island.
Donald Reid, a retired biologist with the Wildlife Conservation Society Canada, says the impact of more shrubs, sedges and grasses in Qikiqtaruk depends on the species.
"Changes generally in ecosystems are never sort of blanket good or bad for anything in particular," he said. "There will always be winners and losers."
Some species, like beavers, prefer this type of vegetation, he said.
"They expanded out of the Mackenzie Delta along the Yukon North Slope into some of the rivers there because they now have a much more abundant food source to get them through the winter," Reid said.













