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Snow is an important factor controlling vegetation functions in high latitudes/altitudes. However, due to the lack of reliable in -situ measurements, the effects of snow on vegetation phenology remains poorly understood. Here, we examine the effects of snow cover duration (SCD) on the start of growing season (SOS) for different vegetation types. SOS and SCD were extracted from in -situ carbon flux and albedo data, respectively, at 51 eddy covariance flux sites in the northern mid -high latitudes. The effects of SCD on SOS vary substantially among different vegetation types. For grassland, preseason SCD outperforms other factors controlling grassland SOS. However, for forests and cropland, the preseason air temperature is the dominant factor in controlling SOS. Preseason SCD mainly influences the SOS by regulating preseason air and soil temperature rather than soil moisture. The CMIP6 Earth system models (ESMs) fail to capture the effect of SCD on SOS. Thus, Random Forest (RF) models were established to predict future SOS changing trends considering the effect of SCD. For grassland and evergreen needleleaf forest, the projected SOS advance rate is slower when SCD is considered. These findings can help us better understand impacts of snow on vegetation phenology and carbon -climate feedbacks in the warming world.

期刊论文 2024-08-15 DOI: 10.1016/j.agrformet.2024.110130 ISSN: 0168-1923

Mt. Everest (Qomolangma or Sagarmatha), the highest mount on Earth and located in the central Himalayas between China and Nepal, is characterized by highly concentrated glaciers and diverse landscapes, and is considered to be one of the most sensitive area to climate change. In this paper, we comprehensively synthesized the climate and environmental changes in the Mt. Everest region, including changes in air temperature, precipitation, glaciers and glacial lakes, atmospheric environment, river and lake water quality, and vegetation phenology. Historical temperature reconstruction from ice cores and tree rings revealed the distinct features of 20th century warming in the Mt. Everest region. Meteorological observations further proved that the Mt. Everest region has been experiencing significant warming (approximately 0.33 degrees C/decade) but relatively stable precipitation during 1961-2018 AD. Projected results (during 2006-2099 AD) under different representative concentration pathway scenarios showed a general warming trend in the region, with larger warming occurring in winter than in summer. Meanwhile, the precipitation projections varied spatially with no significant trends over the region. Intensive glacier shrinkage was characterized by decreasing glacier areas, while glacier-fed river runoff increased. Glacial lakes expanded with increasing glacial lake areas and numbers. These findings indicated a clear regional hydrological response to climate warming. Owing to the remote location of Mt. Everest, the present atmospheric environment remained relatively clean; however, long-range transport of atmospheric pollutants from South Asia and West Asia may have substantially influenced the Mt. Everest region, resulting in increasing concentrations of pollutants since the Industrial Revolution. Anthropogenic activities have been shown to influence river and lake water quality in this remote region, especially in the downstream. The end of the vegetation growing season advanced in the northern slope and did not change in southern slope region of the Mt. Everest, and there was no significant change in start date of the growing season in the region. This review will enhance our understanding of climate and environmental changes in the Mt. Everest region under global warming.

期刊论文 2023-02-26 DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.earscirev.2021.103911 ISSN: 0012-8252

The Tibetan Plateau (TP), also known as the world's Third Pole, is underlain by frozen ground and is highly sensitive to climate change. However, it remains unclear how the variations in soil freeze-thaw could affect vegetation dynamics across the TP. In this study, we adopted the latest datasets for vegetation, climate and soil freeze-thaw in the past two decades to explore the possible impacts of changes in soil freeze-thaw on vegetation greenness and phenology on the TP. According to the satellite-based observations, the TP showed an overall greening trend during 2001-2020, and the growing season length increased significantly at a rate of 3.6 days/ 10a, mainly contributed by the advances of the start of the growing season (2.7 days/10a). Based on ridge regression and partial correlation analysis, air temperature and precipitation were found to be the major dominant factors of vegetation dynamics on the TP, and precipitation played a dominant role in the relatively warm-dry southwestern TP where vegetation browning and spring phenology delays were observed. In the relatively cold regions, earlier soil thaw onset generally facilitated spring phenology, and longer soil thaw duration tended to increase the growing season soil moisture content, which could in turn enhance vegetation greenness. In the relatively warm regions, however, earlier thaw onset and longer thaw duration could possibly exacerbate the growing season water stress and limit vegetation growth. The negative impacts were more evident in the regions with unstable and completely degraded permafrost according to the results in the source region of Yellow and Yangtze rivers. Our findings highlight the spatially varying role of soil freeze-thaw changes in vegetation dynamics, which have important implications for the carbon budget of the TP in a warming future climate as frozen ground continues to degrade.

期刊论文 2022-11-15 DOI: 10.1016/j.agrformet.2022.109192 ISSN: 0168-1923

Climate-induced changes in vegetation phenology at northern latitudes are still poorly understood. Continued monitoring and research are therefore needed to improve the understanding of abiotic drivers. Here we used 14 years of time lapse imagery and climate data from high-Arctic Northeast Greenland to assess the seasonal response of a dwarf shrub heath, grassland, and fen, to inter-annual variation in snow-cover, soil moisture, and air and soil temperatures. A late snowmelt and start of growing season is counterbalanced by a fast greenup and a tendency to higher peak greenness values. Snow water equivalents and soil moisture explained up to 77% of growing season duration and senescence phase, highlighting thatwater availability is a prominent driver in the heath site, rather than temperatures. We found a significant advance in the start of spring by 10 days and in the end of fall by 11 days, resulting in an unchanged growing season length. Vegetation greenness, derived from the imagery, was correlated to primary productivity, showing that the imagery holds valuable information on vegetation productivity.

期刊论文 2017-02-01 DOI: 10.1007/s13280-016-0864-8 ISSN: 0044-7447
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