Mid-elevation
mountain ecosystems most sensitive to rising temperatures and changes in
snowmelt
Results of a new study tie forest
"greenness" in the western United States to fluctuating year-to-year
snowpack extent.
The results show that mid-elevation
mountain ecosystems are the most sensitive to rising temperatures and to
changes in precipitation and snowmelt.
University of Colorado-Boulder scientist
Noah Molotch and colleagues used satellite images and ground measurements to
identify the threshold at which mid-level forests sustained by moisture change
to higher-elevation forests sustained by sunlight.
A paper reporting the results was
published yesterday in the journal Nature Geoscience.
Molotch is the lead author. Co-authors
are Ernesto Trujillo of the University of Colorado-Boulder and Ecole
Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne in Switzerland; Michael Golden and Anne
Kelly of the University of California, Irvine; and Roger Bales of the
University of California, Merced.
"The research demonstrates yet
another complexity in the response of mountain ecosystems to increasing
temperatures," says hydrologist Tom Torgersen, program director in the
National Science Foundation's Division of Earth Sciences, which funded the
research. "High-elevation mountain forests are typically
temperature-stressed and low-elevation mountain forests are often
water-stressed.
"At mid-elevations, 'everything is
just right'--until it goes wrong." Torgersen says, "Higher
temperatures lead to reduced snowpack and reduced water availability, leaving
trees at mid-elevations more stressed and more prone to fires."
The ability to identify this
"tipping point" is important, Molotch says, because mid-level
forests--at altitudes from roughly 6,500 feet to 8,000 feet--are where many
people live and visit. They're also linked with increasing wildfires, beetle
outbreaks and rising tree mortality.
"These results provide the first
direct observations of snowpack-forest connections across broad scales,"
says Molotch.
"Finding the tipping point between
water-limited [mid-elevation] forests and energy-limited [high-elevation]
forests defines the region of the greatest sensitivity to climate change--the
mid-elevation forests--which is where we should focus future research," he
says.
Although the research took place in the
Sierra Nevada mountain range in California, it's applicable to other mountain
ranges across the West.
Climate studies show that the snowpack
in mid-elevation forests in the western United States and other forests around
the world has been decreasing over the past 50 years because of regional
warming.
"We found that mid-elevation
forests show a dramatic sensitivity to snow that fell the previous winter in
terms of accumulation and subsequent melt," said Molotch, also a scientist
at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena.
"If snowpack declines, forests
become more stressed, which can lead to ecological changes in the distribution
and abundance of plant and animal species, and to more vulnerability to fires
and to beetle kill."
Molotch says that about 50 percent of
the greenness seen by satellites in mid-elevation forests is linked with
maximum snow accumulation from the previous winter, with the other 50 percent
related to soil depth, soil nutrients, temperature and sunlight.
"The strength of the relationship
between forest greenness and snowpack from the previous year is very
surprising," Molotch says.
The researchers initially set out to
identify the various components of drought that lead to vegetation stress.
"We went after mountain snowpacks
in the western U.S. because they provide about 60 to 80 percent of the water in
high-elevation mountains," says Molotch.
The team used 26 years of continuous
data from the Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer, a space-borne sensor
flying on a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration satellite, to
measure the forest greenness.
The researchers compared it with
long-term data from 117 snow stations maintained by the California Cooperative
Snow Survey, a consortium of state and federal agencies.
In addition, the scientists used
information gathered from "flux towers" in the southern Sierra Nevada
mountain range. Instruments on these towers measure the exchanges of carbon
dioxide, water vapor and energy between the land and the atmosphere.
Instruments on the towers, which are
some 100 feet high, allowed scientists to measure the sensitivity of both
mid-level and high-level mountainous regions to both wet and dry years--data
that matched up well with the satellite and ground data.
"The implications of this study are
profound when you think about the potential for ecological change in mountain
environments in the West," says Molotch.
"If we look ahead to the time when
climate models are calling for warming and drying conditions, the implication
is that forests will be increasingly water-stressed in the future and more
vulnerable to fires and insect outbreaks."
In the context of recent forest losses
to fire in Colorado and elsewhere, the findings are something that really
deserve attention, Molotch says.
"This tipping-point elevation is
very likely going to migrate up the mountainsides as climate warms."
The research was also funded by NASA.
-NSF-
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