Origin of the southernmost Arctic tundra of continental North America

The Arctic tundra extends beyond the treeline north of 58°N in eastern North America and north of 66°N in western North America and Eurasia. A marked exception to this distribution is the azonal tundra situated as far south as 54°30′–45′N, in the Pointe-Louis-XIV area (JABA), along the fast-rising c...

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Main Authors: Serge Payette, Vanessa Pilon, Mathieu Frégeau
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Canadian Science Publishing 2018-12-01
Series:Arctic Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1139/as-2018-0007
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spelling doaj-1a25ad39046e4a2ea61cf5c9075b0e222021-09-20T14:56:38ZengCanadian Science PublishingArctic Science2368-74602018-12-014479481210.1139/as-2018-0007Origin of the southernmost Arctic tundra of continental North AmericaSerge Payette0Vanessa Pilon1Mathieu Frégeau2Département de biologie and Centre d’études nordiques, Université Laval, Quebec City, QC G1V 0A6, CanadaDépartement de biologie and Centre d’études nordiques, Université Laval, Quebec City, QC G1V 0A6, CanadaDépartement de biologie and Centre d’études nordiques, Université Laval, Quebec City, QC G1V 0A6, CanadaThe Arctic tundra extends beyond the treeline north of 58°N in eastern North America and north of 66°N in western North America and Eurasia. A marked exception to this distribution is the azonal tundra situated as far south as 54°30′–45′N, in the Pointe-Louis-XIV area (JABA), along the fast-rising coasts of James Bay–Hudson Bay. The unusual position of JABA calls into question the influence of climate as the main causal factor for its existence. Macrocharcoal remains extracted from tundra and forest soils were used along a 105 km transect to date the onset of the boreal environment based on past occurrence of conifer fires. Assuming crustal uplift 1.3 m 100 year−1 and 2.4 m 100 year−1 over and before the last 1000 years, and after correcting site elevation at the time the oldest conifer fires occurred, trees established along the coast before 4000 cal. BP. Given charcoal distribution suggesting boreal vegetation in sites ≤13 m a.s.l., JABA was created after 4000 cal. BP when the flat, elongated peninsula emerged above marine waters. It is concluded that JABA origin was most likely caused by the synergistic impact of geophysical factors, isostatic uplift and topography, on a coastal environment already influenced by cold, wind-exposed conditions.https://doi.org/10.1139/as-2018-0007arctic tundraboreal forestcharcoalfire disturbanceisostatic upliftmacrofossil analysis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Serge Payette
Vanessa Pilon
Mathieu Frégeau
spellingShingle Serge Payette
Vanessa Pilon
Mathieu Frégeau
Origin of the southernmost Arctic tundra of continental North America
Arctic Science
arctic tundra
boreal forest
charcoal
fire disturbance
isostatic uplift
macrofossil analysis
author_facet Serge Payette
Vanessa Pilon
Mathieu Frégeau
author_sort Serge Payette
title Origin of the southernmost Arctic tundra of continental North America
title_short Origin of the southernmost Arctic tundra of continental North America
title_full Origin of the southernmost Arctic tundra of continental North America
title_fullStr Origin of the southernmost Arctic tundra of continental North America
title_full_unstemmed Origin of the southernmost Arctic tundra of continental North America
title_sort origin of the southernmost arctic tundra of continental north america
publisher Canadian Science Publishing
series Arctic Science
issn 2368-7460
publishDate 2018-12-01
description The Arctic tundra extends beyond the treeline north of 58°N in eastern North America and north of 66°N in western North America and Eurasia. A marked exception to this distribution is the azonal tundra situated as far south as 54°30′–45′N, in the Pointe-Louis-XIV area (JABA), along the fast-rising coasts of James Bay–Hudson Bay. The unusual position of JABA calls into question the influence of climate as the main causal factor for its existence. Macrocharcoal remains extracted from tundra and forest soils were used along a 105 km transect to date the onset of the boreal environment based on past occurrence of conifer fires. Assuming crustal uplift 1.3 m 100 year−1 and 2.4 m 100 year−1 over and before the last 1000 years, and after correcting site elevation at the time the oldest conifer fires occurred, trees established along the coast before 4000 cal. BP. Given charcoal distribution suggesting boreal vegetation in sites ≤13 m a.s.l., JABA was created after 4000 cal. BP when the flat, elongated peninsula emerged above marine waters. It is concluded that JABA origin was most likely caused by the synergistic impact of geophysical factors, isostatic uplift and topography, on a coastal environment already influenced by cold, wind-exposed conditions.
topic arctic tundra
boreal forest
charcoal
fire disturbance
isostatic uplift
macrofossil analysis
url https://doi.org/10.1139/as-2018-0007
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