1. The tundra phenology database: More than two decades of tundra phenology responses to climate change
- Author
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Ingibjörg S. Jónsdóttir, Bo Elberling, Eric Post, Henrik Wahren, Sabine Rumpf, Greg H. R. Henry, Isla H. Myers-Smith, Marguerite Mauritz, Esther Lévesque, Christopher W. Kopp, Sarah C. Elmendorf, Nicoletta Cannone, Juha M. Alatalo, Elisabeth J. Cooper, Jeffery M. Welker, Esther R. Frei, Michele Carbognani, Philipp R. Semenchuk, Katherine N. Suding, Orjan Toteland, Isabel W. Ashton, Jakob J. Assmann, Chelsea Chisholm, Alessandro Petraglia, Ulf Molau, Courtney G. Collins, Jane G. Smith, Jeffrey T. Kerby, Robert G. Björk, Christian Rixen, Tiffany G. Troxler, Robert D. Hollister, Heidi Rodenhizer, Sonja Wipf, Yue Yang, S. F. Oberbauer, Niels Martin Schmidt, Susan M. Natali, Anne D. Bjorkman, Karin Clark, Janet S. Prevéy, Mats P. Björkman, Edward A. G. Schuur, Toke T. Høye, Zoe A. Panchen, and Kari Klanderud
- Subjects
flowering ,Phenology ,Ecology ,alpine ,Climate change ,plant ,Tundra ,Arctic ,climate change ,vegetation change ,experimental warming ,International Tundra Experiment (ITEX) ,Effects of global warming ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Environmental science ,Terrestrial ecosystem ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
Observations of changes in phenology have provided some of the strongest signals of the effects of climate change on terrestrial ecosystems. The International Tundra Experiment (ITEX), initiated in the early 1990s, established a common protocol to measure plant phenology in tundra study areas across the globe. Today, this valuable collection of phenology measurements depicts the responses of plants at the colder extremes of our planet to experimental and ambient changes in temperature over the past decades. The database contains 150,434 phenology observations of 278 plant species taken at 28 study areas for periods of 1 to 26 years. Here we describe the full dataset to increase the visibility and use of these data in global analyses, and to invite phenology data contributions from underrepresented tundra locations. Portions of this tundra phenology database have been used in three recent syntheses, some datasets are expanded, others are from entirely new study areas, and the entirety of these data are now available at the Polar Data Catalogue., Arctic Science, 8 (3), ISSN:2368-7460
- Published
- 2022