Abstract

Climate warming, increased precipitation, and permafrost thaw in the Arctic are accompanied by an increase in the frequency of full or partial drainage of thermokarst lakes. After lake drainage, highly productive plant communities on nutrient-rich sediments may develop, thus increasing the influencing greening trends of Arctic tundra. However, the magnitude and extent of this process remain poorly understood. Here we characterized plant succession and productivity along a chronosequence of eight drained thermokarst lakes (khasyreys), located in the low-Arctic tundra of the Western Siberian Lowland (WSL), the largest permafrost peatland in the world. Based on a combination of satellite imagery, archive mapping, and radiocarbon dating, we distinguished early (<50 years), mid (50–200 years), and late (200–2000 years) ecosystem stages depending on the age of drainage. In 48 sites within the different aged khasyreys, we measured plant phytomass and productivity, satellite-derived NDVImax, species composition, soil chemistry including nutrients, and plant elementary composition. The annual aboveground net primary productivity of the early and mid khasyrey ranged from 1134 and 660 g·m−2·y−1, which is two to nine times higher than that of the surrounding tundra. Late stages exhibited three to five times lower plant productivity and these ecosystems were distinctly different from early and mid-stages in terms of peat thickness and pools of soil nitrogen and potassium. We conclude that the main driving factor of the vegetation succession in the khasyreys is the accumulation of peat and the permafrost aggradation. The soil nutrient depletion occurs simultaneously with a decrease in the thickness of the active layer and an increase in the thickness of the peat. The early and mid khasyreys may provide a substantial contribution to the observed greening of the WSL low-Arctic tundra.

Highlights

  • Ongoing climate changes in the Arctic are leading to longer, warmer growing seasons, greater nutrient availability and precipitation, enhancing plant productivity and thermokarst activity [1,2,3,4,5].The effect of increased productivity is known as tundra greening and has been confirmed both by satellite-derived Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) and in-situ research [6,7].Plants 2020, 9, 867; doi:10.3390/plants9070867 www.mdpi.com/journal/plantsThe greening is caused by increased vegetation activity but more importantly by widespread colonization of previously unvegetated drained lake basins [8]

  • We conclude that the main driving factor of the vegetation succession in the khasyreys is the accumulation of peat and the permafrost aggradation

  • The microtopography of young khasyreys follows that of the lake bottom and exhibits gentle slope from the shores to the center

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Summary

Introduction

The effect of increased productivity is known as tundra greening and has been confirmed both by satellite-derived Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) and in-situ research [6,7]. The greening is caused by increased vegetation activity but more importantly by widespread colonization of previously unvegetated drained lake basins [8]. The opposite effect is associated with a decrease in the NDVI (i.e., browning) and usually indicates reduced vegetation growth [6]. Greening and browning are observed in various subarctic regions, trends are strongly variable and heterogenous over space and time [9]. Only 18% of the total area of the northern West Siberian Lowland (WSL), the largest province of permafrost peatlands in the world, had statistically significant changes in productivity, with 8.4% increasing (greening) and 9.6%

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