The Arctic, one of the coldest places on Earth, is becoming greener and that's not a good thing

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The Arctic, one of the coldest places on Earth, is becoming greener and that's not a good thing
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Parts of the Arctic region have become greener due to increased plant growth stimulated by warmer air and soil temperatures, says a study that used satellite images to track global tundra ecosystems over decades.
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The study, published in the journal Nature Communications, is the first to measure vegetation changes spanning the entire Arctic tundra, from Alaska and Canada to Siberia, using satellite data from Landsat, a joint mission of NASA and the US Geological Survey (USGS).

"The Arctic tundra is one of the coldest biomes on Earth, and it's also one of the most rapidly warming," said lead researcher Logan Berner from Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff, US.

"This Arctic greening we see is really a bellwether of global climatic change -- it's a biome-scale response to rising air temperatures."

Greening can represent plants growing more, becoming denser, and/or shrubs encroaching on typical tundra grasses and moss.

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When the tundra vegetation changes, it impacts not only the wildlife that depend on certain plants, but also the people who live in the region and depend on local ecosystems for food.

While active plants will absorb more carbon from the atmosphere, the warming temperatures could also be thawing permafrost, thereby releasing greenhouse gasses.

Berner and his colleagues used the Landsat data and additional calculations to estimate the peak greenness for a given year for each of 50,000 randomly selected sites across the tundra.

Between 1985 and 2016, about 38 per cent of the tundra sites across Alaska, Canada, and western Eurasia showed greening.

Only three per cent showed the opposite browning effect, which would mean fewer actively growing plants.

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To include eastern Eurasian sites, they compared data starting in 2000, when Landsat satellites began regularly collecting images of that region.

With this global view, 22 per cent of sites greened between 2000 and 2016, while four per cent browned, said the study.

"Whether it's since 1985 or 2000, we see this greening of the Arctic evident in the Landsat record," Berner said.

"And we see this biome-scale greening at the same time and over the same period as we see really rapid increases in summer air temperatures."

The researchers compared these greening patterns with other factors, and found that it's also associated with higher soil temperatures and higher soil moisture.

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They confirmed these findings with plant growth measurements from field sites around the Arctic.

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