Potential Effects of Climate Change on Treeline Position in the Swedish Mountains

Climate change may strongly influence species distribution and, thus, the structure and function of ecosystems. This paper describes simulated changes in the position of the upper treeline in the Swedish mountains in response to predicted climate change. Data on predicted summer temperature changes,...

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Main Authors: Jon Moen, Karin Aune, Lars Edenius, Anders Angerbjörn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2004-06-01
Series:Ecology and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol9/iss1/art16/
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spelling doaj-51527cb00bfc42f1a472edccc6e94da52020-11-24T22:41:32ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872004-06-01911610.5751/ES-00634-090116634Potential Effects of Climate Change on Treeline Position in the Swedish MountainsJon Moen0Karin Aune1Lars Edenius2Anders Angerbjörn3Department of Ecology and Environmental Science, Umeå UniversityDepartment of Ecology and Environmental Science, Umeå UniversityDept of Animal Ecology, Swedish University of Agricultural SciencesDepartment of Zoology, Stockholm UniversityClimate change may strongly influence species distribution and, thus, the structure and function of ecosystems. This paper describes simulated changes in the position of the upper treeline in the Swedish mountains in response to predicted climate change. Data on predicted summer temperature changes, the current position of the treeline, and a digital elevation model were used to predict the position of the treeline over a 100-year timeframe. The results show the treeline advancing upward by 233-667 m, depending on the climate scenario used and location within the mountain chain. Such changes hypothetically caused a 75-85% reduction in treeless alpine heaths, with 60-93% of the remaining areas being scree slopes and boulder fields. For this change to occur, the migration rate of the trees would be in the order of 23-221 m yr-1, which is well within published migration rates for wind-dispersed deciduous trees. The remaining alpine areas would be strongly fragmented. These drastic changes would influence all aspects of mountain ecosystems, including biodiversity conservation and human land-use patterns.http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol9/iss1/art16/Betula pubescens</i> ssp. <i>czerepanovii</i>Climate changeMountain birchTreeline dynamics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jon Moen
Karin Aune
Lars Edenius
Anders Angerbjörn
spellingShingle Jon Moen
Karin Aune
Lars Edenius
Anders Angerbjörn
Potential Effects of Climate Change on Treeline Position in the Swedish Mountains
Ecology and Society
Betula pubescens</i> ssp. <i>czerepanovii</i>
Climate change
Mountain birch
Treeline dynamics
author_facet Jon Moen
Karin Aune
Lars Edenius
Anders Angerbjörn
author_sort Jon Moen
title Potential Effects of Climate Change on Treeline Position in the Swedish Mountains
title_short Potential Effects of Climate Change on Treeline Position in the Swedish Mountains
title_full Potential Effects of Climate Change on Treeline Position in the Swedish Mountains
title_fullStr Potential Effects of Climate Change on Treeline Position in the Swedish Mountains
title_full_unstemmed Potential Effects of Climate Change on Treeline Position in the Swedish Mountains
title_sort potential effects of climate change on treeline position in the swedish mountains
publisher Resilience Alliance
series Ecology and Society
issn 1708-3087
publishDate 2004-06-01
description Climate change may strongly influence species distribution and, thus, the structure and function of ecosystems. This paper describes simulated changes in the position of the upper treeline in the Swedish mountains in response to predicted climate change. Data on predicted summer temperature changes, the current position of the treeline, and a digital elevation model were used to predict the position of the treeline over a 100-year timeframe. The results show the treeline advancing upward by 233-667 m, depending on the climate scenario used and location within the mountain chain. Such changes hypothetically caused a 75-85% reduction in treeless alpine heaths, with 60-93% of the remaining areas being scree slopes and boulder fields. For this change to occur, the migration rate of the trees would be in the order of 23-221 m yr-1, which is well within published migration rates for wind-dispersed deciduous trees. The remaining alpine areas would be strongly fragmented. These drastic changes would influence all aspects of mountain ecosystems, including biodiversity conservation and human land-use patterns.
topic Betula pubescens</i> ssp. <i>czerepanovii</i>
Climate change
Mountain birch
Treeline dynamics
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol9/iss1/art16/
work_keys_str_mv AT jonmoen potentialeffectsofclimatechangeontreelinepositionintheswedishmountains
AT karinaune potentialeffectsofclimatechangeontreelinepositionintheswedishmountains
AT larsedenius potentialeffectsofclimatechangeontreelinepositionintheswedishmountains
AT andersangerbjorn potentialeffectsofclimatechangeontreelinepositionintheswedishmountains
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