Regional variation in green-up timing along a caribou migratory corridor: Spatial associations with snowmelt and temperature

Spring green-up in arctic and alpine systems is predominantly controlled by temperature and snowmelt timing preceding and during the growing season. Variation in the timing of green-up across space is an important aspect of resource variability with which mobile herbivores must contend. Here, we mea...

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Main Authors: Christian John, Douglas Miller, Eric Post
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2020-01-01
Series:Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15230430.2020.1796009
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spelling doaj-f430be636e6f4a918099287d83e661262021-02-08T14:09:12ZengTaylor & Francis GroupArctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research1523-04301938-42462020-01-0152141642310.1080/15230430.2020.17960091796009Regional variation in green-up timing along a caribou migratory corridor: Spatial associations with snowmelt and temperatureChristian John0Douglas Miller1Eric Post2University of CaliforniaPenn State UniversityUniversity of CaliforniaSpring green-up in arctic and alpine systems is predominantly controlled by temperature and snowmelt timing preceding and during the growing season. Variation in the timing of green-up across space is an important aspect of resource variability with which mobile herbivores must contend. Here, we measure the explanatory power of abiotic drivers of green-up in a Low Arctic region of west Greenland, host to a migratory caribou population. We identify inconsistent relationships between green-up and abiotic drivers across space. Whereas green-up timing is most closely related to snowmelt in some areas, in others it is most closely related to spring temperature. The negative correlation between the explanatory power of snowmelt and temperature suggests that at broad scales, where green-up is more constrained by snow cover, such as moist, mountainous coastal areas, it is less constrained by temperature. Where snow is less persistent through winter, such as cold, dry inland areas, temperature becomes the predominant factor driving green-up. If the principal driver of spring plant growth is inconsistent across a region, long-term trends in resource phenology could vary spatially. For seasonal migrants like caribou, synchronizing migration timing with resource phenology may be complicated by discordant interannual change across drivers of green-up timing.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15230430.2020.1796009landscape phenologygreen-upsnowmeltclimate changeremote sensing
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Christian John
Douglas Miller
Eric Post
spellingShingle Christian John
Douglas Miller
Eric Post
Regional variation in green-up timing along a caribou migratory corridor: Spatial associations with snowmelt and temperature
Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research
landscape phenology
green-up
snowmelt
climate change
remote sensing
author_facet Christian John
Douglas Miller
Eric Post
author_sort Christian John
title Regional variation in green-up timing along a caribou migratory corridor: Spatial associations with snowmelt and temperature
title_short Regional variation in green-up timing along a caribou migratory corridor: Spatial associations with snowmelt and temperature
title_full Regional variation in green-up timing along a caribou migratory corridor: Spatial associations with snowmelt and temperature
title_fullStr Regional variation in green-up timing along a caribou migratory corridor: Spatial associations with snowmelt and temperature
title_full_unstemmed Regional variation in green-up timing along a caribou migratory corridor: Spatial associations with snowmelt and temperature
title_sort regional variation in green-up timing along a caribou migratory corridor: spatial associations with snowmelt and temperature
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research
issn 1523-0430
1938-4246
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Spring green-up in arctic and alpine systems is predominantly controlled by temperature and snowmelt timing preceding and during the growing season. Variation in the timing of green-up across space is an important aspect of resource variability with which mobile herbivores must contend. Here, we measure the explanatory power of abiotic drivers of green-up in a Low Arctic region of west Greenland, host to a migratory caribou population. We identify inconsistent relationships between green-up and abiotic drivers across space. Whereas green-up timing is most closely related to snowmelt in some areas, in others it is most closely related to spring temperature. The negative correlation between the explanatory power of snowmelt and temperature suggests that at broad scales, where green-up is more constrained by snow cover, such as moist, mountainous coastal areas, it is less constrained by temperature. Where snow is less persistent through winter, such as cold, dry inland areas, temperature becomes the predominant factor driving green-up. If the principal driver of spring plant growth is inconsistent across a region, long-term trends in resource phenology could vary spatially. For seasonal migrants like caribou, synchronizing migration timing with resource phenology may be complicated by discordant interannual change across drivers of green-up timing.
topic landscape phenology
green-up
snowmelt
climate change
remote sensing
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15230430.2020.1796009
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