Interrelations between relief, vegetation, disturbances, and permafrost in the forest-steppe of central Mongolia

被引:27
|
作者
Klinge, Michael [1 ]
Schneider, Florian [1 ]
Dulamsuren, Choimaa [2 ]
Arndt, Kim [1 ]
Bayarsaikhan, Uudus [3 ]
Sauer, Daniela [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Gottingen, Inst Geog, Dept Phys Geog, Goldschmidtstr 5, D-37077 Gottingen, Germany
[2] Univ Freiburg, Fac Environm & Nat Resources, Appl Vegetat Ecol, Freiburg, Germany
[3] Natl Univ Mongolia, Sch Arts & Sci, Dept Biol, Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia
关键词
forest fire; forest‐ steppe; geomorphology; ground‐ penetrating radar (GPR); Mongolia; permafrost; soil; GROUND-PENETRATING RADAR; DISCONTINUOUS PERMAFROST; SOIL-MOISTURE; CLIMATE; DEGRADATION; LARCH; VARIABILITY; PATTERNS; HISTORY; CARBON;
D O I
10.1002/esp.5116
中图分类号
P9 [自然地理学];
学科分类号
0705 ; 070501 ;
摘要
In semi-arid central Asia, relief has a strong impact on the distribution of vegetation and discontinuous permafrost. Our aim was to analyse causal chains and inter-relationships that control the spatial patterns of forest and permafrost in the forest-steppe of the northern Khangai Mountains in Mongolia. For this purpose, we conducted soil-profile descriptions, ground-penetrating radar sounding, and vegetation mapping to gain information about forest and permafrost distribution. We integrated remote-sensing analysis and field-mapping data, including soil properties, vegetation cover, forest fires and anthropogenic forest use. We developed and applied a technique for spatial delineation of permafrost distribution, based on the parameters Topographic Wetness Index (TWI), incoming solar radiation and Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI). Key outcomes of this study are that the occurrence of discontinuous permafrost within 1 m depth is limited to forest stands larger than 100 ha on north-facing slopes. Dense ground vegetation supports permafrost, whereas sandy soil texture leads to greater depth of the permafrost table. As the seasonal ice in the active layer progressively melts down during summer, meltwater interflow above the permafrost table provides additional soil moisture downslope. This process is reflected in enhanced vitality of the steppe vegetation on toe slopes below forests with permafrost. This effect can in turn be used to indirectly detect permafrost in forest stands by remote sensing. Permafrost mostly disappears after forest fires and other severe disturbances, but it may re-establish during forest regrowth. However, climate warming is presently leading to a loss of permafrost regeneration potential after disturbance, and to a shift from climate-induced and ecosystem-driven permafrost to entirely ecosystem-protected permafrost. These trends will result in a further decrease of permafrost area after forest disturbance.
引用
收藏
页码:1766 / 1782
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] STATE OF WATER-STABLE SOIL STRUCTURE IN THE CENTRAL FOREST-STEPPE UNDER AGROGENIC AND POSTAGROGENIC MAINTENANCE
    Bulyhin, S. Yu.
    Demydenko, O. V.
    Tkachenko, M. A.
    Vitvitsky, S. V.
    Zadubynna, Ye. V.
    Lisovyy, M. V.
    AGRICULTURAL SCIENCE AND PRACTICE, 2022, 9 (02): : 3 - 22
  • [32] Relic Vergilius Oak (Quercus virgiliana Ten.) Trees Could Preserve Microhabitats of Pannonian Forest-Steppe Vegetation
    Bordacs, Sandor
    Pinter, Beata
    Horvath, Csaba
    Benedek, Lajos
    Ladanyi, Marta
    DIVERSITY-BASEL, 2024, 16 (07):
  • [33] Co-varying effects of vegetation structure and terrain attributes are responsible for soil respiration spatial patterns in a sandy forest-steppe transition zone
    Sule, Gabriella
    Foti, Szilvia
    Kormoczi, Laszlo
    Petras, Dora
    Kardos, Levente
    Balogh, Janos
    WEB ECOLOGY, 2021, 21 (02) : 95 - 107
  • [34] Intraspecific Diversity of Pinus sylvestris L. in Provenance Trials of the Central Russian Forest-Steppe Area
    Galdina, Tatyana E.
    Chernodubov, Alexey I.
    Mikhailova, Maria I.
    LESNOY ZHURNAL-FORESTRY JOURNAL, 2023, (03) : 84 - 98
  • [35] An environmental gradient change of Picea mongolica seedling from the center of a forest canopy gap in forest-steppe ecotone in Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region of China
    Chun-jing Zou
    Chao Zhang
    Yong-liang Ma
    Wen-duo Xu
    Journal of Forestry Research, 2006, 17 (3) : 221 - 225
  • [36] Insights into the late Holocene vegetation history of the East European forest-steppe: case study Sudzha (Kursk region, Russia)
    Shumilovskikh, Lyudmila S.
    Rodinkova, Vlasta Ye.
    Rodionova, Aleksandra
    Troshina, Alla
    Ershova, Ekaterina
    Novenko, Elena
    Zazovskaya, Elya
    Sycheva, Svetlana A.
    Kiselev, Dmitry I.
    Schluetz, Frank
    Schneeweiss, Jens
    VEGETATION HISTORY AND ARCHAEOBOTANY, 2019, 28 (05) : 513 - 528
  • [37] The Influence of Relief on the Density of Light-Forest Trees within the Small-Dry-Valley Network of Uplands in the Forest-Steppe Zone of Eastern Europe
    Ukrainskiy, Pavel
    Terekhin, Edgar
    Gusarov, Artyom
    Zelenskaya, Eugenia
    Lisetskii, Fedor
    GEOSCIENCES, 2020, 10 (11) : 1 - 18
  • [38] Distribution of juniper stands and the impact of environmental parameters on growth in the drought-stressed forest-steppe zone of Central Anatolia
    Kahveci, Gulzade
    Alan, Murat
    Kose, Nesibe
    DENDROBIOLOGY, 2018, 80 : 61 - 69
  • [39] 14C DATING TO STUDY THE DEVELOPMENT OF SOILS IN THE FOREST-STEPPE OF THE CENTRAL RUSSIAN UPLAND AS A RESULT OF BIOCLIMATIC CHANGES AND LONG-TERM CULTIVATION
    Chendev, Yury
    Aleksandrovskiy, Aleksandr
    Khokhlova, Olga
    Skripkin, Vadim
    RADIOCARBON, 2018, 60 (04) : 1185 - 1198
  • [40] Composition of Organic Matter and Biological Properties of Eroded and Aggraded Soils of a Small Catchment in the Forest-Steppe Zone of the Central Russian Upland
    Farkhodov, Yu. R.
    Nikitin, D. A.
    Yaroslavtseva, N. V.
    Maksimovich, S. V.
    Ziganshina, A. R.
    Danilin, I. V.
    Kholodov, V. A.
    Semenov, M. V.
    Zhidkin, A. P.
    EURASIAN SOIL SCIENCE, 2024, 57 (09) : 1474 - 1486