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Dive into the research topics where A. D. McGuire is active.

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Featured researches published by A. D. McGuire.


Climatic Change | 2013

Expert assessment of vulnerability of permafrost carbon to climate change

Edward A. G. Schuur; Benjamin W. Abbott; William B. Bowden; Victor Brovkin; P. Camill; Josep G. Canadell; Jeffrey P. Chanton; F. S. Chapin; Torben R. Christensen; P. Ciais; Benjamin T. Crosby; Claudia I. Czimczik; Guido Grosse; Jennifer W. Harden; Daniel J. Hayes; Gustaf Hugelius; Julie D. Jastrow; Jeremy B. Jones; Thomas Kleinen; C. Koven; Gerhard Krinner; Peter Kuhry; David M. Lawrence; A. D. McGuire; Susan M. Natali; Jonathan O’Donnell; Chien-Lu Ping; William J. Riley; Annette Rinke; Vladimir E. Romanovsky

Approximately 1700xa0Pg of soil carbon (C) are stored in the northern circumpolar permafrost zone, more than twice as much C than in the atmosphere. The overall amount, rate, and form of C released to the atmosphere in a warmer world will influence the strength of the permafrost C feedback to climate change. We used a survey to quantify variability in the perception of the vulnerability of permafrost C to climate change. Experts were asked to provide quantitative estimates of permafrost change in response to four scenarios of warming. For the highest warming scenario (RCP 8.5), experts hypothesized that C release from permafrost zone soils could be 19–45xa0Pg C by 2040, 162–288xa0Pg C by 2100, and 381–616xa0Pg C by 2300 in CO2 equivalent using 100-year CH4 global warming potential (GWP). These values become 50xa0% larger using 20-year CH4 GWP, with a third to a half of expected climate forcing coming from CH4 even though CH4 was only 2.3xa0% of the expected C release. Experts projected that two-thirds of this release could be avoided under the lowest warming scenario (RCP 2.6). These results highlight the potential risk from permafrost thaw and serve to frame a hypothesis about the magnitude of this feedback to climate change. However, the level of emissions proposed here are unlikely to overshadow the impact of fossil fuel burning, which will continue to be the main source of C emissions and climate forcing.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2001

Incorporation of a permafrost model into a large-scale ecosystem model: Evaluation of temporal and spatial scaling issues in simulating soil thermal dynamics

Qianlai Zhuang; Vladimir E. Romanovsky; A. D. McGuire

This study evaluated whether a model of permafrost dynamics with a 0.5-day resolution internal time step that is driven by monthly climate inputs is adequate for representing the soil thermal dynamics in a large-scale ecosystem model. An extant version of the Goodrich model was modified to develop a soil thermal model (STM) with the capability to operate with either 0.5-hour or 0.5-day internal time steps and to be driven with either daily or monthly input data. The choice of internal time step had little effect on the simulation of soil thermal dynamics of a black spruce site in Alaska. The use of monthly climate inputs to drive the model resulted in an error of less than 1°C in the upper organic soil layer and in an accurate simulation of seasonal active layer dynamics. Uncertainty analyses of the STM driven with monthly climate inputs identified that soil temperature estimates of the upper organic layer were most sensitive to variability in parameters that described snow thermal conductivity, moss thickness, and moss thermal conductivity. The STM was coupled to the Terrestrial Ecosystem Model (TEM), and the performance of the coupled model was verified for the simulation of soil temperatures in applications to a black spruce site in Canada and to white spruce, aspen, and tundra sites in Alaska. A 1°C error in the temperature of the upper organic soil layer had little influence on the carbon dynamics simulated for the black spruce site in Canada. Application of the model across the range of black spruce ecosystems in North America demonstrated that the STM-TEM has the capability to operate over temporal and spatial domains that consider substantial variation in surface climate given that spatial variability in key structural characteristics and physical properties of the soil thermal regime are described.


Canadian Journal of Forest Research | 2010

Resilience of Alaska's Boreal Forest to Climatic Change

F. S. Chapin; A. D. McGuire; Roger W. Ruess; Teresa N. Hollingsworth; Michelle C. Mack; Jill F. Johnstone; Eric S. Kasischke; Eugénie S. Euskirchen; Jeremy B. Jones; M. T. Jorgenson; Knut Kielland; Gary P. Kofinas; Merritt R. Turetsky; John Yarie; Andrea H. Lloyd; D. L. Taylor

This paper assesses the resilience of Alaska’s boreal forest system to rapid climatic change. Recent warming is associated with reduced growth of dominant tree species, plant disease and insect outbreaks, warming and thawing of permafrost, drying of lakes, increased wildfire extent, increased postfire recruitment of deciduous trees, and reduced safety of hunters traveling on river ice. These changes have modified key structural features, feedbacks, and interactions in the boreal forest, including reduced effects of upland permafrost on regional hydrology, expansion of boreal forest into tundra, and amplification of climate warming because of reduced albedo (shorter winter season) and carbon release from wildfires. Other temperature-sensitive processes for which no trends have been detected include composition of plant and microbial communities, long-term landscape-scale change in carbon stocks, stream discharge, mammalian population dynamics, and river access and subsistence opportunities for rural indige...


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2003

Climate change and Arctic ecosystems: 1. Vegetation changes north of 55 degrees N between the last glacial maximum, mid-Holocene, and present

Nancy H. Bigelow; Linda B. Brubaker; Mary E. Edwards; Sp Harrison; I. C. Prentice; P. M. Anderson; Andrei Andreev; Patrick J. Bartlein; Torben R. Christensen; Wolfgang Cramer; Jed O. Kaplan; A. V. Lozhkin; Nadya Matveyeva; David F. Murray; A. D. McGuire; Vy Razzhivin; J. C. Ritchie; Benjamin Smith; Donald A. Walker; Konrad Gajewski; V Wolf; Björn H. Holmqvist; Yaeko Igarashi; K Kremenetskii; Aage Paus; Mfj Pisaric; V. S. Volkova

A unified scheme to assign pollen samples to vegetation types was used to reconstruct vegetation patterns north of 55°N at the last glacial maximum (LGM) and mid-Holocene (6000 years B.P.). The pollen data set assembled for this purpose represents a comprehensive compilation based on the work of many projects and research groups. Five tundra types (cushion forb tundra, graminoid and forb tundra, prostrate dwarf-shrub tundra, erect dwarf-shrub tundra, and low- and high-shrub tundra) were distinguished and mapped on the basis of modern pollen surface samples. The tundra-forest boundary and the distributions of boreal and temperate forest types today were realistically reconstructed. During the mid-Holocene the tundra-forest boundary was north of its present position in some regions, but the pattern of this shift was strongly asymmetrical around the pole, with the largest northward shift in central Siberia (∼200 km), little change in Beringia, and a southward shift in Keewatin and Labrador (∼200 km). Low- and high-shrub tundra extended farther north than today. At the LGM, forests were absent from high latitudes. Graminoid and forb tundra abutted on temperate steppe in northwestern Eurasia while prostrate dwarf-shrub, erect dwarf-shrub, and graminoid and forb tundra formed a mosaic in Beringia. Graminoid and forb tundra is restricted today and does not form a large continuous biome, but the pollen data show that it was far more extensive at the LGM, while low- and high-shrub tundra were greatly reduced, illustrating the potential for climate change to dramatically alter the relative areas occupied by different vegetation types.


Nature Communications | 2016

Circumpolar distribution and carbon storage of thermokarst landscapes

David Olefeldt; Santonu Goswami; Guido Grosse; Daniel J. Hayes; Gustaf Hugelius; Peter Kuhry; A. D. McGuire; Vladimir E. Romanovsky; A.B.K. Sannel; Edward A. G. Schuur; Merritt R. Turetsky

Thermokarst is the process whereby the thawing of ice-rich permafrost ground causes land subsidence, resulting in development of distinctive landforms. Accelerated thermokarst due to climate change will damage infrastructure, but also impact hydrology, ecology and biogeochemistry. Here, we present a circumpolar assessment of the distribution of thermokarst landscapes, defined as landscapes comprised of current thermokarst landforms and areas susceptible to future thermokarst development. At 3.6 × 106 km2, thermokarst landscapes are estimated to cover ∼20% of the northern permafrost region, with approximately equal contributions from three landscape types where characteristic wetland, lake and hillslope thermokarst landforms occur. We estimate that approximately half of the below-ground organic carbon within the study region is stored in thermokarst landscapes. Our results highlight the importance of explicitly considering thermokarst when assessing impacts of climate change, including future landscape greenhouse gas emissions, and provide a means for assessing such impacts at the circumpolar scale.


Canadian Journal of Forest Research | 2010

The changing effects of Alaska's boreal forests on the climate system

Eugénie S. Euskirchen; A. D. McGuire; F. S. Chapin; Ts Rupp

In the boreal forests of Alaska, recent changes in climate have influenced the exchange of trace gases, water, and energy between these forests and the atmosphere. These changes in the structure and function of boreal forests can then feed back to impact regional and global climates. In this manuscript, we examine the type and magnitude of the climate feedbacks from boreal forests in Alaska. Research generally suggests that the net effect of a warming climate is a positive regional feedback to warming. Currently, the primary positive climate feedbacks are likely related to decreases in surface albedo due to decreases in snow cover. Fewer negative feedbacks have been identified, and they may not be large enough to counterbalance the large positive feedbacks. These positive feedbacks are most pronounced at the regional scale and reduce the resilience of the boreal vegetationxa0– climate system by amplifying the rate of regional warming. Given the recent warming in this region, the large variety of associated ...


Global Change Biology | 2013

The response of soil organic carbon of a rich fen peatland in interior Alaska to projected climate change.

Zhaosheng Fan; A. D. McGuire; Merritt R. Turetsky; Jennifer W. Harden; J. M. Waddington; Evan S. Kane

It is important to understand the fate of carbon in boreal peatland soils in response to climate change because a substantial change in release of this carbon as CO2 and CH4 could influence the climate system. The goal of this research was to synthesize the results of a field water table manipulation experiment conducted in a boreal rich fen into a process-based model to understand how soil organic carbon (SOC) of the rich fen might respond to projected climate change. This model, the peatland version of the dynamic organic soil Terrestrial Ecosystem Model (peatland DOS-TEM), was calibrated with data collected during 2005-2011 from the control treatment of a boreal rich fen in the Alaska Peatland Experiment (APEX). The performance of the model was validated with the experimental data measured from the raised and lowered water-table treatments of APEX during the same period. The model was then applied to simulate future SOC dynamics of the rich fen control site under various CO2 emission scenarios. The results across these emissions scenarios suggest that the rate of SOC sequestration in the rich fen will increase between year 2012 and 2061 because the effects of warming increase heterotrophic respiration less than they increase carbon inputs via production. However, after 2061, the rate of SOC sequestration will be weakened and, as a result, the rich fen will likely become a carbon source to the atmosphere between 2062 and 2099. During this period, the effects of projected warming increase respiration so that it is greater than carbon inputs via production. Although changes in precipitation alone had relatively little effect on the dynamics of SOC, changes in precipitation did interact with warming to influence SOC dynamics for some climate scenarios.


Nature | 1993

Global climate change and terrestrial net primary production

Jerry M. Melillo; A. D. McGuire; David W. Kicklighter; Berrien Moore; Charles J. Vörösmarty; Annette L. Schloss


Science | 2005

Role of Land-Surface Changes in Arctic Summer Warming

F. S. Chapin; Matthew Sturm; Mark C. Serreze; Joe McFadden; Jeffrey R. Key; Andrea H. Lloyd; A. D. McGuire; Ts Rupp; Amanda H. Lynch; Joshua P. Schimel; Jason Beringer; W.L. Chapman; Howard E. Epstein; Eugénie S. Euskirchen; Larry D. Hinzman; Gensuo Jia; Chien-Lu Ping; Ken D. Tape; Catharine Copass Thompson; Donald A. Walker; Jeffrey M. Welker


Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics | 1995

The Role of Nitrogen in the Response of Forest Net Primary Production to Elevated Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide

A. D. McGuire; Jerry M. Melillo; Linda A. Joyce

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Jerry M. Melillo

Marine Biological Laboratory

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Vladimir E. Romanovsky

University of Alaska Fairbanks

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David W. Kicklighter

Marine Biological Laboratory

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