Litcius/Paper detail

From white to green: Snow cover loss and increased vegetation productivity in the European Alps

Sabine B. Rumpf, Mathieu Gravey, Olivier Brönnimann, Miska Luoto, Carmen Cianfrani, Grégoire Mariethoz, Antoine Guisan

2022Science252 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Mountains are hotspots of biodiversity and ecosystem services, but they are warming about twice as fast as the global average. Climate change may reduce alpine snow cover and increase vegetation productivity, as in the Arctic. Here, we demonstrate that 77% of the European Alps above the tree line experienced greening (productivity gain) and <1% browning (productivity loss) over the past four decades. Snow cover declined significantly during this time, but in <10% of the area. These trends were only weakly correlated: Greening predominated in warmer areas, driven by climatic changes during summer, while snow cover recession peaked at colder temperatures, driven by precipitation changes. Greening could increase carbon sequestration, but this is unlikely to outweigh negative implications, including reduced albedo and water availability, thawing permafrost, and habitat loss.

Topics & Concepts

GreeningProductivityEnvironmental scienceTree lineSnowPermafrostPhysical geographyVegetation (pathology)Climate changeAlbedo (alchemy)PrecipitationBiodiversityEcologyGeographyMeteorologyBiologyMacroeconomicsPathologyArtEconomicsPerformance artMedicineArt historyCryospheric studies and observationsClimate change and permafrostTree-ring climate responses