Shrub Expansion Can Counteract Carbon Losses From Warming Tundra

  • Theresia Yazbeck
  • , Gil Bohrer
  • , Oliver Sonnentag
  • , Bo Qu
  • , Matteo Detto
  • , Gabriel Hould-Gosselin
  • , Vincent Graveline
  • , Haley Alcock
  • , Bruno Lecavalier
  • , Philip Marsh
  • , Alex Cannon
  • , William J. Riley
  • , Qing Zhu
  • , Fengming Yuan
  • , Benjamin Sulman

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Arctic warming is causing substantial compositional, structural, and functional changes in tundra vegetation including shrub and tree-line expansion and densification. However, predicting the carbon trajectories of the changing Arctic is challenging due to interacting feedbacks between vegetation composition and structure, and surface characteristics. We conduct a sensitivity analysis of the current-date to 2100 projected surface energy fluxes, soil carbon pools, and CO2 fluxes to different shrub expansion rates under future emission scenarios (intermediate—RCP4.5, and high—RCP8.5) using the Arctic-focused configuration of E3SM Land Model (ELM). We focus on Trail Valley Creek (TVC), an upland tundra site in the western Canadian Arctic, which is experiencing shrub densification and expansion. We find that shrub expansion did not significantly alter the modeled surface energy and water budgets. However, the carbon balance was sensitive to shrub expansion, which drove higher rates of carbon sequestration as a consequence of higher shrubification rates. Thus, at low shrub expansion rates, the site would become a carbon source, especially under RCP8.5, due to higher temperatures, which deepen the active layer and enhance soil respiration. At higher shrub expansion rates, TVC would become a net CO2 sink under both Representative Concentration Pathway scenarios due to higher shrub productivity outweighing temperature-driven respiration increase. Our simulations highlight the effect of shrub expansion on Arctic ecosystem carbon fluxes and stocks. We predict that at TVC, shrubification rate would interact with climate change intensity to determine whether the site would become a carbon sink or source under projected future climate.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article numbere2024JG008721
JournalJournal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences
Volume130
Issue number8
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 2025

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Forestry
  • Aquatic Science
  • Ecology
  • Water Science and Technology
  • Soil Science
  • Atmospheric Science
  • Palaeontology

Keywords

  • Arctic shrubification
  • carbon budget
  • carbon fluxes
  • eddy covariance
  • ELM

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