Shrub expansion in SW Greenland under modest regional warming: disentangling effects of human disturbance and grazing

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Standard

Shrub expansion in SW Greenland under modest regional warming : disentangling effects of human disturbance and grazing. / Jørgensen, Rasmus Halfdan; Meilby, Henrik; Kollmann, Johannes.

In: Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research, Vol. 45, No. 4, 2013, p. 515-525.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Jørgensen, RH, Meilby, H & Kollmann, J 2013, 'Shrub expansion in SW Greenland under modest regional warming: disentangling effects of human disturbance and grazing', Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research, vol. 45, no. 4, pp. 515-525. https://doi.org/10.1657/1938-4246-45.4.515

APA

Jørgensen, R. H., Meilby, H., & Kollmann, J. (2013). Shrub expansion in SW Greenland under modest regional warming: disentangling effects of human disturbance and grazing. Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research, 45(4), 515-525. https://doi.org/10.1657/1938-4246-45.4.515

Vancouver

Jørgensen RH, Meilby H, Kollmann J. Shrub expansion in SW Greenland under modest regional warming: disentangling effects of human disturbance and grazing. Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research. 2013;45(4):515-525. https://doi.org/10.1657/1938-4246-45.4.515

Author

Jørgensen, Rasmus Halfdan ; Meilby, Henrik ; Kollmann, Johannes. / Shrub expansion in SW Greenland under modest regional warming : disentangling effects of human disturbance and grazing. In: Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research. 2013 ; Vol. 45, No. 4. pp. 515-525.

Bibtex

@article{777f2545a21644fca25f2081191e9687,
title = "Shrub expansion in SW Greenland under modest regional warming: disentangling effects of human disturbance and grazing",
abstract = "Shrub expansion has been observed widely in tundra areas across the Arctic. This phenomenon has been partially attributed to increasing temperatures over the past century. However, relationships among shrub expansion, grazing, and human disturbance have been studied little. SW Greenland is a subarctic to low-arctic region with a long and complex land-use history and only modest temperature increases over the past 50 years (0.2 °C decade-1), but changes in shrub cover have not previously been studied in this region. We compiled historical photographs of vegetation in SW Greenland (1898–1974) and repeated the photos in 2010 and 2011. Sixty-four photo pairs were cropped into 133 smaller units and classified by aspect, substrate stability, muskoxen grazing, and human disturbance. The photo material was evaluated by 22 experts with respect to changes in shrub cover, revealing a general increase across the whole data set, and in a subset including only undisturbed sites. Shrub cover increased most on E and SE slopes, in sites with stable substrate, and in areas characterized by human disturbance and without muskoxen grazing. The general shrub cover increase could be caused mainly by changed land-use intensity, but effects of the moderately increased temperatures cannot be ruled out.",
author = "J{\o}rgensen, {Rasmus Halfdan} and Henrik Meilby and Johannes Kollmann",
year = "2013",
doi = "10.1657/1938-4246-45.4.515",
language = "English",
volume = "45",
pages = "515--525",
journal = "Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research",
issn = "1523-0430",
publisher = "University of Colorado Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Shrub expansion in SW Greenland under modest regional warming

T2 - disentangling effects of human disturbance and grazing

AU - Jørgensen, Rasmus Halfdan

AU - Meilby, Henrik

AU - Kollmann, Johannes

PY - 2013

Y1 - 2013

N2 - Shrub expansion has been observed widely in tundra areas across the Arctic. This phenomenon has been partially attributed to increasing temperatures over the past century. However, relationships among shrub expansion, grazing, and human disturbance have been studied little. SW Greenland is a subarctic to low-arctic region with a long and complex land-use history and only modest temperature increases over the past 50 years (0.2 °C decade-1), but changes in shrub cover have not previously been studied in this region. We compiled historical photographs of vegetation in SW Greenland (1898–1974) and repeated the photos in 2010 and 2011. Sixty-four photo pairs were cropped into 133 smaller units and classified by aspect, substrate stability, muskoxen grazing, and human disturbance. The photo material was evaluated by 22 experts with respect to changes in shrub cover, revealing a general increase across the whole data set, and in a subset including only undisturbed sites. Shrub cover increased most on E and SE slopes, in sites with stable substrate, and in areas characterized by human disturbance and without muskoxen grazing. The general shrub cover increase could be caused mainly by changed land-use intensity, but effects of the moderately increased temperatures cannot be ruled out.

AB - Shrub expansion has been observed widely in tundra areas across the Arctic. This phenomenon has been partially attributed to increasing temperatures over the past century. However, relationships among shrub expansion, grazing, and human disturbance have been studied little. SW Greenland is a subarctic to low-arctic region with a long and complex land-use history and only modest temperature increases over the past 50 years (0.2 °C decade-1), but changes in shrub cover have not previously been studied in this region. We compiled historical photographs of vegetation in SW Greenland (1898–1974) and repeated the photos in 2010 and 2011. Sixty-four photo pairs were cropped into 133 smaller units and classified by aspect, substrate stability, muskoxen grazing, and human disturbance. The photo material was evaluated by 22 experts with respect to changes in shrub cover, revealing a general increase across the whole data set, and in a subset including only undisturbed sites. Shrub cover increased most on E and SE slopes, in sites with stable substrate, and in areas characterized by human disturbance and without muskoxen grazing. The general shrub cover increase could be caused mainly by changed land-use intensity, but effects of the moderately increased temperatures cannot be ruled out.

U2 - 10.1657/1938-4246-45.4.515

DO - 10.1657/1938-4246-45.4.515

M3 - Journal article

VL - 45

SP - 515

EP - 525

JO - Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research

JF - Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research

SN - 1523-0430

IS - 4

ER -

ID: 99878529