Experimentally increased snow depth affects high Arctic microarthropods inconsistently over two consecutive winters
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/27421Date
2022-10-27Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Krab, Eveline J.; Lundin, Erik J.; Coulson, Stephen James; Dorrepaal, Ellen; Cooper, Elisabeth J.Abstract
Climate change induced alterations to winter conditions may afect decomposer organisms controlling
the vast carbon stores in northern soils. Soil microarthropods are particularly abundant decomposers
in Arctic ecosystems. We studied whether increased snow depth afected microarthropods, and if
efects were consistent over two consecutive winters. We sampled Collembola and soil mites from
a snow accumulation experiment at Svalbard in early summer and used soil microclimatic data to
explore to which aspects of winter climate microarthropods are most sensitive. Community densities
difered substantially between years and increased snow depth had inconsistent efects. Deeper snow
hardly afected microarthropods in 2015, but decreased densities and altered relative abundances of
microarthropods and Collembola species after a milder winter in 2016. Although increased snow depth
increased soil temperatures by 3.2 °C throughout the snow cover periods, the best microclimatic
predictors of microarthropod density changes were spring soil temperature and snowmelt day. Our
study shows that extrapolation of observations of decomposer responses to altered winter climate
conditions to future scenarios should be avoided when communities are only sampled on a single
occasion, since efects of longer-term gradual changes in winter climate may be obscured by interannual weather variability and natural variability in population sizes.
Publisher
NatureCitation
Krab, Lundin, Coulson, Dorrepaal, Cooper. Experimentally increased snow depth affects high Arctic microarthropods inconsistently over two consecutive winters. Scientific Reports. 2022;12(1)Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
Copyright 2022 The Author(s)