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1. Global plant trait relationships extend to the climatic extremes of the tundra biome.

2. Traditional plant functional groups explain variation in economic but not size-related traits across the tundra biome.

3. Summer warming explains widespread but not uniform greening in the Arctic tundra biome

4. Spatial and temporal patterns of greenness on the Yamal Peninsula, Russia : interactions of ecological and social factors affecting the Arctic normalized difference vegetation index

5. The Arctic Plant Aboveground Biomass Synthesis Dataset.

6. Plant traits poorly predict winner and loser shrub species in a warming tundra biome.

7. Common mechanisms explain nitrogen-dependent growth of Arctic shrubs over three decades despite heterogeneous trends and declines in soil nitrogen availability.

8. New climate models reveal faster and larger increases in Arctic precipitation than previously projected.

9. Divergence of Arctic shrub growth associated with sea ice decline.

10. Summer warming explains widespread but not uniform greening in the Arctic tundra biome.

11. The polar regions in a 2°C warmer world.

12. Vegetation on mesic loamy and sandy soils along a 1700-km maritime Eurasia Arctic Transect.

13. Plant functional trait change across a warming tundra biome.

14. The role of lake size and local phenomena for monitoring ground-fast lake ice.

15. Disentangling the coupling between sea ice and tundra productivity in Svalbard.

16. Sea ice, rain-on-snow and tundra reindeer nomadism in Arctic Russia.

17. Long-Term Trends and Role of Climate in the Population Dynamics of Eurasian Reindeer.

18. Where do the treeless tundra areas of northern highlands fit in the global biome system: toward an ecologically natural subdivision of the tundra biome.

19. Detection of snow surface thawing and refreezing in the Eurasian Arctic with QuikSCAT: implications for reindeer herding.

20. High resilience in the Yamal-Nenets social-ecological system, West Siberian Arctic, Russia.

21. Geographic variations in anthropogenic drivers that influence the vulnerability and resilience of social-ecological systems.

22. Bringing feedback and resilience of high-latitude ecosystems into the corporate boardroom.

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