Vegetation Biomass, Leaf Area Index, and NDVI Patterns and Relationships Along Two Latitudinal Transects in Arctic Tundra
Howard E. Epstein1, Donald Walker2, Martha Raynolds3, Alexia Kelley4, Jiong Jia5, Chien-Lu Ping6, Gary Michaelson7, Marina Liebman8, Elina Kaarlejarvi9, Artem Khomutov10, Patrick Kuss11, Natalia Moskalenko12, Pavel Orekhov13, George Matyshak14, Bruce Forbes15
1Department of Environmental Science, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, 22904-4123, USA, Phone 434-924-4308, hee2b [at] virginia [dot] edu
2University of Alaska Fairbanks, USA
3University of Alaska Fairbanks, USA
4Duke University, USA
5Chinese Academy of Science, Beijing, China
6University of Alaska Agriculture and Foresty Experiment Station, Palmer, AK, USA
7University of Alaska Agriculture and Forestry Experiment Station, Palmer, AK, USA
8Russian Academy of Science, Moscow, Russia
9University of Lapland, Rovaniemi, Finland
10Russian Academy of Science, Moscow, Russia
11University of Bern, Bern, Switzerland
12Russian Academy of Science, Moscow, Russia
13Russian Academy of Science, Moscow, Russia
14Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia
15University of Lapland, Rovaniemi, Finland
Analyses of vegetation properties along climatic gradients provide first order approximations as to how vegetation might respond to a temporally dynamic climate. Until recently, no systematic study of tundra vegetation had been conducted along bioclimatic transects that represent the full latitudinal extent of the arctic tundra biome. Since 1999, we have been collecting data on arctic tundra vegetation and soil properties along two such transects, the North American Arctic Transect (NAAT) and the Yamal Arctic Transect (YAT). The NAAT spans the arctic tundra from the Low Arctic of the North Slope of Alaska to the polar desert of Cape Isachsen on Ellef Ringnes Island in the Canadian Archipelago. The Yamal Arctic Transect located in northwest Siberia, Russia, presently ranges from the forest–tundra transition at Nadym to the High Arctic tundra on Belyy Ostrov off the north coast of the Yamal Peninsula. The summer warmth indices (SWI—sum of mean monthly temperatures greater than 0°C) range from approximately 40°C months to 3°C months from south to north. For largely zonal sites along these transects, we systematically collected leaf area index (LAI-2000 Plant Canopy Analyzer), normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI—PSII hand-held spectro-radiometer), and vegetation biomass (clip harvests). Site-averaged LAI ranges from 1.08 to 0 along the transects, yet can be highly variable at the landscape scale. Site-averaged NDVI ranges from 0.67 to 0.26 along the transects, and is less variable than LAI at the landscape scale. Total aboveground live biomass ranges from approximately 700 g m