Tree biomass does not correlate with soil carbon stocks in forest-tundra
ecotones along a 1100 km latitudinal gradient in Norway
Abstract
Due to climate warming, forests are expanding to higher elevations and
latitudes at the expense of tundra vegetation. While the subsequent
increase in aboveground biomass is well-documented, there is much
speculation regarding the effects on soil organic carbon (SOC) stocks.
To provide insight into the consequences of tree encroachment into
treeless tundra, we sampled SOC stocks across 36 forest-tundra ecotones
along a 1100 km latitudinal gradient in Norway. Our results show that
SOC stocks vary greatly within, as well as among treeline ecotones, and
that tree biomass and tree species are not correlated with this
variability. Instead, SOC stocks increase with temperature, and vary
with slope steepness, slope aspect, and soil parent material. Applying a
‘space-for-time substitution’ perspective, our findings suggest that
tree encroachment into tundra is unlikely to have immediate consequences
for SOC stocks.