Shrubs expand in the tundra in northern Scandinavia. And it is known that fixation of nitrogen from the air is in the tundra to a high degree performed by cyanobacteria associated with mosses. Also enhanced nitrogen fixation stimulates plant growth. New research shows that as taller shrubs expand into the tundra, nutrients in their leaf litter will either promote or reduce the nitrogen fixation, depending upon which shrub species that will dominate. The scientific results have recently been shown by scientists Kathrin Rousk and Anders Michelsen from Center for Permafrost and Department of Biology at University of Copenhagen, and is now published in the widely recognized scientific journal Global Change Biology.

Mosses in subarctic tundra are colonized by bacteria that fix atmospheric nitrogen (N 2 ), and together, they can contribute 50% to total ecosystem N input. Despite this key role, the effects of climate warming and increased litter input as a result of shrub expansion on N 2 fixation in mosses are ambiguous.

Assistant professor Kathrin Rousk, Department of Biology, explains, "to aid in predicting the role of moss-associated N 2 fixation in a warmer, future climate, we quantified N 2 fixation throughout the snow-free period in subarctic tundra. We used data from a field experiment in Northern Sweden, in which climate change was simulated with open top chambers to increase the air and soil temperature, and with addition of plant litter from willow and birch-shrubs.

The results show that N 2 fixation was highest in the warmed and in the birch litter addition plots (around 3 kg N ha-1 yr-1), while the willow litter additions lead to decreased N 2 fixation rates (less than 2 kg N ha-1 yr-1)

Field experiment in tundra vegetation in Northern Sweden. Open top chambers simulate future warming of soil and plants caused by climate change, and leaf litter is added to simulate enhanced litterfall caused by expansion of birch trees and willow shrubs (Photo: Anders Michelsen)

Kathrin Rousk concludes, 'Warming will lead to increased N 2 fixation rates in mosses, while the consequences of further shrub expansion will depend on the dominant shrub invading: the expansion of willow will likely limit the N input via N 2 fixation, whereas a predominance of birch shrubs will increase N 2 fixation and with that, N supply to the ecosystem."

The amount of N 2 that is fixed is important because N is an essential nutrient for plant growth and is available only in limited supply in arctic ecosystems. Nitrogen availability influences how much CO2 plants are able to acquire through photosynthesis, and hence it impacts the carbon balance. Changes in N 2 fixation due to global warming will alter N input to arctic ecosystems with significant consequences for plant growth.