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The Snow Must Go On: Ground Ice Encasement, Snow Compaction and Absence of Snow Differently Cause Soil Hypoxia, CO(2) Accumulation and Tree Seedling Damage in Boreal Forest

At high latitudes, the climate has warmed at twice the rate of the global average with most changes observed in autumn, winter and spring. Increasing winter temperatures and wide temperature fluctuations are leading to more frequent rain-on-snow events and freeze-thaw cycles causing snow compaction...

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Autores principales: Martz, Françoise, Vuosku, Jaana, Ovaskainen, Anu, Stark, Sari, Rautio, Pasi
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4890806/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27254100
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0156620
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author Martz, Françoise
Vuosku, Jaana
Ovaskainen, Anu
Stark, Sari
Rautio, Pasi
author_facet Martz, Françoise
Vuosku, Jaana
Ovaskainen, Anu
Stark, Sari
Rautio, Pasi
author_sort Martz, Françoise
collection PubMed
description At high latitudes, the climate has warmed at twice the rate of the global average with most changes observed in autumn, winter and spring. Increasing winter temperatures and wide temperature fluctuations are leading to more frequent rain-on-snow events and freeze-thaw cycles causing snow compaction and formation of ice layers in the snowpack, thus creating ice encasement (IE). By decreasing the snowpack insulation capacity and restricting soil-atmosphere gas exchange, modification of the snow properties may lead to colder soil but also to hypoxia and accumulation of trace gases in the subnivean environment. To test the effects of these overwintering conditions changes on plant winter survival and growth, we established a snow manipulation experiment in a coniferous forest in Northern Finland with Norway spruce and Scots pine seedlings. In addition to ambient conditions and prevention of IE, we applied three snow manipulation levels: IE created by artificial rain-on-snow events, snow compaction and complete snow removal. Snow removal led to deeper soil frost during winter, but no clear effect of IE or snow compaction done in early winter was observed on soil temperature. Hypoxia and accumulation of CO(2) were highest in the IE plots but, more importantly, the duration of CO(2) concentration above 5% was 17 days in IE plots compared to 0 days in ambient plots. IE was the most damaging winter condition for both species, decreasing the proportion of healthy seedlings by 47% for spruce and 76% for pine compared to ambient conditions. Seedlings in all three treatments tended to grow less than seedlings in ambient conditions but only IE had a significant effect on spruce growth. Our results demonstrate a negative impact of winter climate change on boreal forest regeneration and productivity. Changing snow conditions may thus partially mitigate the positive effect of increasing growing season temperatures on boreal forest productivity.
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spelling pubmed-48908062016-06-10 The Snow Must Go On: Ground Ice Encasement, Snow Compaction and Absence of Snow Differently Cause Soil Hypoxia, CO(2) Accumulation and Tree Seedling Damage in Boreal Forest Martz, Françoise Vuosku, Jaana Ovaskainen, Anu Stark, Sari Rautio, Pasi PLoS One Research Article At high latitudes, the climate has warmed at twice the rate of the global average with most changes observed in autumn, winter and spring. Increasing winter temperatures and wide temperature fluctuations are leading to more frequent rain-on-snow events and freeze-thaw cycles causing snow compaction and formation of ice layers in the snowpack, thus creating ice encasement (IE). By decreasing the snowpack insulation capacity and restricting soil-atmosphere gas exchange, modification of the snow properties may lead to colder soil but also to hypoxia and accumulation of trace gases in the subnivean environment. To test the effects of these overwintering conditions changes on plant winter survival and growth, we established a snow manipulation experiment in a coniferous forest in Northern Finland with Norway spruce and Scots pine seedlings. In addition to ambient conditions and prevention of IE, we applied three snow manipulation levels: IE created by artificial rain-on-snow events, snow compaction and complete snow removal. Snow removal led to deeper soil frost during winter, but no clear effect of IE or snow compaction done in early winter was observed on soil temperature. Hypoxia and accumulation of CO(2) were highest in the IE plots but, more importantly, the duration of CO(2) concentration above 5% was 17 days in IE plots compared to 0 days in ambient plots. IE was the most damaging winter condition for both species, decreasing the proportion of healthy seedlings by 47% for spruce and 76% for pine compared to ambient conditions. Seedlings in all three treatments tended to grow less than seedlings in ambient conditions but only IE had a significant effect on spruce growth. Our results demonstrate a negative impact of winter climate change on boreal forest regeneration and productivity. Changing snow conditions may thus partially mitigate the positive effect of increasing growing season temperatures on boreal forest productivity. Public Library of Science 2016-06-02 /pmc/articles/PMC4890806/ /pubmed/27254100 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0156620 Text en © 2016 Martz et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Martz, Françoise
Vuosku, Jaana
Ovaskainen, Anu
Stark, Sari
Rautio, Pasi
The Snow Must Go On: Ground Ice Encasement, Snow Compaction and Absence of Snow Differently Cause Soil Hypoxia, CO(2) Accumulation and Tree Seedling Damage in Boreal Forest
title The Snow Must Go On: Ground Ice Encasement, Snow Compaction and Absence of Snow Differently Cause Soil Hypoxia, CO(2) Accumulation and Tree Seedling Damage in Boreal Forest
title_full The Snow Must Go On: Ground Ice Encasement, Snow Compaction and Absence of Snow Differently Cause Soil Hypoxia, CO(2) Accumulation and Tree Seedling Damage in Boreal Forest
title_fullStr The Snow Must Go On: Ground Ice Encasement, Snow Compaction and Absence of Snow Differently Cause Soil Hypoxia, CO(2) Accumulation and Tree Seedling Damage in Boreal Forest
title_full_unstemmed The Snow Must Go On: Ground Ice Encasement, Snow Compaction and Absence of Snow Differently Cause Soil Hypoxia, CO(2) Accumulation and Tree Seedling Damage in Boreal Forest
title_short The Snow Must Go On: Ground Ice Encasement, Snow Compaction and Absence of Snow Differently Cause Soil Hypoxia, CO(2) Accumulation and Tree Seedling Damage in Boreal Forest
title_sort snow must go on: ground ice encasement, snow compaction and absence of snow differently cause soil hypoxia, co(2) accumulation and tree seedling damage in boreal forest
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4890806/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27254100
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0156620
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