TY - JOUR
T1 - A longer vernal window
T2 - the role of winter coldness and snowpack in driving spring transitions and lags
AU - Contosta, Alexandra R.
AU - Adolph, Alden
AU - Burchsted, Denise
AU - Burakowski, Elizabeth
AU - Green, Mark
AU - Guerra, David
AU - Albert, Mary
AU - Dibb, Jack
AU - Martin, Mary
AU - McDowell, William H.
AU - Routhier, Michael
AU - Wake, Cameron
AU - Whitaker, Rachel
AU - Wollheim, Wilfred
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 The Authors Global Change Biology Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
PY - 2017/4/1
Y1 - 2017/4/1
N2 - Climate change is altering the timing and duration of the vernal window, a period that marks the end of winter and the start of the growing season when rapid transitions in ecosystem energy, water, nutrient, and carbon dynamics take place. Research on this period typically captures only a portion of the ecosystem in transition and focuses largely on the dates by which the system wakes up. Previous work has not addressed lags between transitions that represent delays in energy, water, nutrient, and carbon flows. The objectives of this study were to establish the sequence of physical and biogeochemical transitions and lags during the vernal window period and to understand how climate change may alter them. We synthesized observations from a statewide sensor network in New Hampshire, USA, that concurrently monitored climate, snow, soils, and streams over a three-year period and supplemented these observations with climate reanalysis data, snow data assimilation model output, and satellite spectral data. We found that some of the transitions that occurred within the vernal window were sequential, with air temperatures warming prior to snow melt, which preceded forest canopy closure. Other transitions were simultaneous with one another and had zero-length lags, such as snowpack disappearance, rapid soil warming, and peak stream discharge. We modeled lags as a function of both winter coldness and snow depth, both of which are expected to decline with climate change. Warmer winters with less snow resulted in longer lags and a more protracted vernal window. This lengthening of individual lags and of the entire vernal window carries important consequences for the thermodynamics and biogeochemistry of ecosystems, both during the winter-to-spring transition and throughout the rest of the year.
AB - Climate change is altering the timing and duration of the vernal window, a period that marks the end of winter and the start of the growing season when rapid transitions in ecosystem energy, water, nutrient, and carbon dynamics take place. Research on this period typically captures only a portion of the ecosystem in transition and focuses largely on the dates by which the system wakes up. Previous work has not addressed lags between transitions that represent delays in energy, water, nutrient, and carbon flows. The objectives of this study were to establish the sequence of physical and biogeochemical transitions and lags during the vernal window period and to understand how climate change may alter them. We synthesized observations from a statewide sensor network in New Hampshire, USA, that concurrently monitored climate, snow, soils, and streams over a three-year period and supplemented these observations with climate reanalysis data, snow data assimilation model output, and satellite spectral data. We found that some of the transitions that occurred within the vernal window were sequential, with air temperatures warming prior to snow melt, which preceded forest canopy closure. Other transitions were simultaneous with one another and had zero-length lags, such as snowpack disappearance, rapid soil warming, and peak stream discharge. We modeled lags as a function of both winter coldness and snow depth, both of which are expected to decline with climate change. Warmer winters with less snow resulted in longer lags and a more protracted vernal window. This lengthening of individual lags and of the entire vernal window carries important consequences for the thermodynamics and biogeochemistry of ecosystems, both during the winter-to-spring transition and throughout the rest of the year.
KW - climate change
KW - energy balance
KW - lag
KW - snow
KW - soil
KW - spring
KW - stream
KW - temperature
KW - transition
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U2 - 10.1111/gcb.13517
DO - 10.1111/gcb.13517
M3 - Article
C2 - 27808458
AN - SCOPUS:84995960708
SN - 1354-1013
VL - 23
SP - 1610
EP - 1625
JO - Global change biology
JF - Global change biology
IS - 4
ER -