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Plant succession on glacial moraines in the Arctic Brooks Range along a >125,000-year glacial chronosequence/toposequence

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posted on 2023-03-15, 13:00 authored by Shawnee A. Kasanke, Donald A. Walker, F. Stuart Chapin III, Daniel H. Mann

Widespread glacial retreat is now occurring in many arctic mountain ranges, yet little is known about primary succession following deglaciation in these settings. Newly created habitats could provide refugia for flora and fauna whose ranges are threatened elsewhere by rapid warming. To assess vegetation responses to glacial retreat in an arctic–alpine setting, we first describe plant community development on two recently deglaciated moraines in the Brooks Range. We then compare these recent communities with communities developed along a moraine chronosequence that spans >125,000 years and ranges in altitude between 800 and 1,700 m.a.s.l. Results show that (1) within twenty-two to thirty-six years following deglaciation, primary succession begins with the assembly of small communities of eight to thirteen vascular and nonvascular plant species; (2) species turnover is low, with many pioneer taxa, particularly lichens, persisting at the oldest sites and across all altitudes; and (3) overall, succession is directional and slow, with species richness increasing for up to 25,000 years, and percentage vegetation cover reaching >100 percent on the oldest glacial deposits. This is the first vegetation study on primary succession in the high central Brooks Range, and it supplies a previously missing alpine element within a vegetation transect across northern Alaska’s bioclimatic gradient.

Funding

We are grateful for funding from The Ted McHenry Biology Field Research Fund, The Randy Howenstein Memorial Field Research Fund, and The Institute of Arctic Biology Summer Graduate Fellowship for supply, travel, and logistical funding. Helicopter support into the Grizzly Glacier cirque was provided by National Science Foundation Long Term Ecological Research program. The Michigan State University Herbarium Endowment Fund provided funding for travel and training in crustose lichen identification with Dr. Alan Fryday. This work was supported by the University of Alaska Fairbanks.

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    Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research

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