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Evidence and Implications of Recent Climate Change in Northern Alaska and Other Arctic Regions

TitleEvidence and Implications of Recent Climate Change in Northern Alaska and Other Arctic Regions
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2005
AuthorsHinzman, L. D., N. D. Bettez, W. R. Bolton, F. S. Chapin, M. B. Dyurgerov, C. L. Fastie, B. Griffith, R. D. Hollister, A. Hope, H. P. Huntington, A. M. Jensen, G. J. Jia, T. Jorgenson, D. L. Kane, D. R. Klein, G. Kofinas, A. H. Lynch, A. H. Lloyd, A. D. McGuire, F. E. Nelson, W. C. Oechel, T. E. Osterkamp, C. H. Racine, V. E. Romanovsky, R. S. Stone, D. A. Stow, M. Sturm, C. E. Tweedie, G. L. Vourlitis, M. D. Walker, D. A. Walker, P. J. Webber, J. M. Welker, K. Winker, and K. Yoshikawa
JournalClimatic Change
Volume72
Issue3
Pagination251-298
Date PublishedOCT 2005
ISBN Number0165-0009
KeywordsACTIVE LAYER, BOREAL FORESTS, DIFFERENCE VEGETATION INDEX, DISCONTINUOUS PERMAFROST, GREENLAND ICE-SHEET, HOLOCENE TREELINE, INTERNATIONAL TUNDRA EXPERIMENT, mass-balance, SEWARD PENINSULA, SURFACE-ENERGY BALANCE
Abstract

The Arctic climate is changing. Permafrost is warming, hydrological processes are changing and biological and social systems are also evolving in response to these changing conditions. Knowing how the structure and function of arctic terrestrial ecosystems are responding to recent and persistent climate change is paramount to understanding the future state of the Earth system and how humans will need to adapt. Our holistic review presents a broad array of evidence that illustrates convincingly; the Arctic is undergoing a system-wide response to an altered climatic state. New extreme and seasonal surface climatic conditions are being experienced, a range of biophysical states and processes influenced by the threshold and phase change of freezing point are being altered, hydrological and biogeochemical cycles are shifting, and more regularly human sub-systems are being affected. Importantly, the patterns, magnitude and mechanisms of change have sometimes been unpredictable or difficult to isolate due to compounding factors. In almost every discipline represented, we show how the biocomplexity of the Arctic system has highlighted and challenged a paucity of integrated scientific knowledge, the lack of sustained observational and experimental time series, and the technical and logistic constraints of researching the Arctic environment. This study supports ongoing efforts to strengthen the interdisciplinarity of arctic system science and improve the coupling of large scale experimental manipulation with sustained time series observations by incorporating and integrating novel technologies, remote sensing and modeling.

DOIDOI 10.1007/s10584-005-5352-2
Reference number

245

Short TitleEvidence and Implications of Recent Climate Change in Northern Alaska and Other Arctic Regions
Citation Key245