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dc.contributor.advisorWilliams, Mathewen
dc.contributor.advisorSommerkorn, Martinen
dc.contributor.advisorNichol, Carolineen
dc.contributor.authorStreet, Lorna Elizabethen
dc.date.accessioned2011-11-22T15:56:12Z
dc.date.available2011-11-22T15:56:12Z
dc.date.issued2011-11-24
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/1842/5651
dc.description.abstractRapid climate change in Arctic regions is of concern due to important feedbacks between the Arctic land surface and the global climate system. A large amount of organic carbon (C) is currently stored in Arctic soils; if decomposition is stimulated under warmer conditions additional release of CO2 could result in an accelerating feedback on global climate. The strength and direction of Arctic C cycle - climate feedbacks will depend on the growth response of vegetation; if plant growth increases some or all of the extra CO2 emissions may be offset. Currently the Arctic is thought to be a small net sink for CO2, the expected balance of terrestrial C sinks and sources in the future is unknown. In this thesis I explore some of the critical unknowns in current understanding of C cycle dynamics in Arctic vegetation. Quantifying gross primary productivity (GPP) over regional scales is complicated by large spatial heterogeneity in plant functional type (PFT) in Arctic vegetation. I use data from five Arctic sites to test the generality of a relationship between leaf area index (LAI) and canopy total foliar nitrogen (TFN). LAI and TFN are key drivers of GPP and are tightly constrained across PFTs in Low Arctic Alaska and Sweden, therefore greatly simplifying the task of up-scaling. I use data from Greenland, Barrow and Svalbard to asses the generality of the LAI-TFN relationship in predicting GPP at higher Arctic latitudes. Arctic ecosystems are unique among biomes in the large relative contribution of bryophytes (mosses, liverworts and hornworts) to plant biomass. The contribution of bryophytes to ecosystem function has been relatively understudied and they are poorly represented in terrestrial C models. I use ground based measurements in Northern Sweden to fill an existing data gap by quantifying CO2 fluxes from bryophytes patches in early spring and summer, and develop a simple model of bryophyte GPP. Using the model I compare bryophyte GPP to that of vascular plants before, during and after the summer growing season, finding that productive bryophyte patches can contribute up to 90 % of modelled annual GPP for typical vascular plant communities at the same site, and that the relative magnitude of bryophyte GPP is greatest in spring whilst the vascular plant canopy is still developing. Understanding how GPP relates to plant growth is important in relating remotely sensed increases in Arctic ‘greenness’ to changes in plant C stocks. I use a 13C pulselabelling techniques to follow the fate of recently fixed C in mixed vascular and bryophyte vegetation, with a focus on quantifying the contribution of bryophytes to ecosystem carbon use efficiency (CUE). I show that bryophytes contribute significantly to GPP in mixed vegetation, and act to increase ecosystem CUE. I highlight the importance of including bryophytes, which do not have roots, in aboveground: belowground partitioning schemes in C models. To further explore C turnover in bryophytes, I use the results of a second 13C labelling experiment to develop a model of C turnover in two contrasting Arctic mosses (Polytrichum piliferum and Sphagnum fuscum). I find significant differences in C turnover between Polytrichum piliferum which respires or translocates about 80 % of GPP, while Sphagnum fuscum respires 60 %. This analysis is the first to explicitly model differences in C partitioning between Arctic bryophyte species. Finally, I discuss the implications of each chapter for our understanding of Arctic C dynamics, and suggest areas for further research.en
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherThe University of Edinburghen
dc.relation.haspartThe University of Edinburgh. College of Science and Engineeringen
dc.relation.hasversionShaver, G.R., Street, L.E., Rastetter, E.B., Van Wijk, M.T., & Williams, M. (2007) Functional convergence in regulation of net CO2 flux in heterogeneous tundra landscapes in Alaska and Sweden. Journal of Ecology, 95, 802-817.en
dc.relation.hasversionStreet, L.E., Shaver, G.R., Williams, M., & Van Wijk, M.T. (2007) What is the relationship between changes in canopy leaf area and changes in photosynthetic CO2 flux in arctic ecosystems? Journal of Ecology, 95, 139-150.en
dc.relation.hasversionWilliams, M., Bell, R., Spadavecchia, L., Street, L.E., & Van Wijk, M.T. (2008) Upscaling leaf area index in an Arctic landscape through multiscale observations. Global Change Biology, 14, 1517-1530.en
dc.subjecttundraen
dc.subjectbryophyteen
dc.subjectNPPen
dc.subjectGPPen
dc.subjectphotosynthesisen
dc.subjectrespirationen
dc.subjectallocationen
dc.subjecttundraen
dc.subjectbryophyteen
dc.subjectNPPen
dc.subjectGPPen
dc.subjectphotosynthesisen
dc.subjectrespirationen
dc.subjectallocationen
dc.subjectGlobal Change Research Instituteen
dc.titleCarbon dynamics in arctic vegetationen
dc.typeThesis or Dissertationen
dc.type.qualificationlevelDoctoralen
dc.type.qualificationnamePhD Doctor of Philosophyen


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