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Dive into the research topics where Dagrun Vikhamar-Schuler is active.

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Featured researches published by Dagrun Vikhamar-Schuler.


AMBIO: A Journal of the Human Environment | 2016

Changing Arctic snow cover: A review of recent developments and assessment of future needs for observations, modelling, and impacts

Stef Bokhorst; Stine Højlund Pedersen; Ludovic Brucker; Oleg A. Anisimov; Jarle W. Bjerke; Ross Brown; Dorothee Ehrich; Richard Essery; Achim Heilig; Susanne Ingvander; Cecilia Johansson; Margareta Johansson; Ingibjörg S. Jónsdóttir; Niila Inga; Kari Luojus; Giovanni Macelloni; Heather Mariash; Donald McLennan; Gunhild Rosqvist; Atsushi Sato; Hannele Savela; Martin Schneebeli; A. A. Sokolov; Sergey A. Sokratov; Silvia Terzago; Dagrun Vikhamar-Schuler; Scott N. Williamson; Yubao Qiu; Terry V. Callaghan

Snow is a critically important and rapidly changing feature of the Arctic. However, snow-cover and snowpack conditions change through time pose challenges for measuring and prediction of snow. Plausible scenarios of how Arctic snow cover will respond to changing Arctic climate are important for impact assessments and adaptation strategies. Although much progress has been made in understanding and predicting snow-cover changes and their multiple consequences, many uncertainties remain. In this paper, we review advances in snow monitoring and modelling, and the impact of snow changes on ecosystems and society in Arctic regions. Interdisciplinary activities are required to resolve the current limitations on measuring and modelling snow characteristics through the cold season and at different spatial scales to assure human well-being, economic stability, and improve the ability to predict manage and adapt to natural hazards in the Arctic region.


Environmental Research Letters | 2014

Record-low primary productivity and high plant damage in the Nordic Arctic Region in 2012 caused by multiple weather events and pest outbreaks

Jarle W. Bjerke; Stein Rune Karlsen; Kjell Arild Høgda; Eirik Malnes; Jane U. Jepsen; Sarah Lovibond; Dagrun Vikhamar-Schuler; Hans Tømmervik

The release of cold temperature constraints on photosynthesis has led to increased productivity (greening) in significant parts (32–39%) of the Arctic, but much of the Arctic shows stable (57–64%) or reduced productivity (browning, <4%). Summer drought and wildfires are the best-documented drivers causing browning of continental areas, but factors dampening the greening effect of more maritime regions have remained elusive. Here we show how multiple anomalous weather events severely affected the terrestrial productivity during one water year (October 2011–September 2012) in a maritime region north of the Arctic Circle, the Nordic Arctic Region, and contributed to the lowest mean vegetation greenness (normalized difference vegetation index) recorded this century. Procedures for field data sampling were designed during or shortly after the events in order to assess both the variability in effects and the maximum effects of the stressors. Outbreaks of insect and fungal pests also contributed to low greenness. Vegetation greenness in 2012 was 6.8% lower than the 2000–11 average and 58% lower in the worst affected areas that were under multiple stressors. These results indicate the importance of events (some being mostly neglected in climate change effect studies and monitoring) for primary productivity in a high-latitude maritime region, and highlight the importance of monitoring plant damage in the field and including frequencies of stress events in models of carbon economy and ecosystem change in the Arctic. Fourteen weather events and anomalies and 32 hypothesized impacts on plant productivity are summarized as an aid for directing future research.


Journal of Climate | 2016

Changes in winter warming events in the Nordic Arctic Region

Dagrun Vikhamar-Schuler; Ketil Isaksen; Jan Erik Haugen; Hans Tømmervik; Bartłomiej Luks; Thomas Vikhamar Schuler; Jarle W. Bjerke

AbstractIn recent years extreme winter warming events have been reported in arctic areas. These events are characterized as extraordinarily warm weather episodes, occasionally combined with intense rainfall, causing ecological disturbance and challenges for arctic societies and infrastructure. Ground-ice formation due to winter rain or melting prevents ungulates from grazing, leads to vegetation browning, and impacts soil temperatures. The authors analyze changes in frequency and intensity of winter warming events in the Nordic arctic region—northern Norway, Sweden, and Finland, including the arctic islands Svalbard and Jan Mayen. This study identifies events in the longest available records of daily temperature and precipitation, as well as in future climate scenarios, and performs analyses of long-term trends for climate indices aimed to capture these individual events. Results show high frequencies of warm weather events during the 1920s–30s and the past 15 years (2000–14), causing weak positive trends...


Annals of Glaciology | 2013

Use of a multilayer snow model to assess grazing conditions for reindeer

Dagrun Vikhamar-Schuler; I. Hanssen-Bauer; Thomas Vikhamar Schuler; Svein D. Mathiesen; Michael Lehning

Abstract High-density snow layers deteriorate grazing conditions for reindeer during winter. We compare two different methods for identifying past winters with difficult grazing conditions for reindeer in Kautokeino, northern Norway. A long-term climate analysis based on monthly values of precipitation and temperature (1900–2011) demonstrated that the reported winters were difficult to identify systematically. The processes leading to hard layers or ground-ice layers occur on daily, not monthly, timescales, and whether or not specific conditions are problematic depends on the development throughout the winter, not just on single values. To better analyse the weather conditions and development over time that favour the formation of high-density snow layers, we apply the multilayer model SNOWPACK over the period 1956–2010. We simulate the evolution of the snowpack by forcing the model with 6 hour interval meteorological data. The model output was analysed by summing up the vertical extent of the simulated high-density snow layers (>350 kg m–3) for each winter. These results were compared with historical records of difficult winter grazing conditions reported in the period 1956–2010. In particular, the heavy losses of reindeer during the catastrophic 1967/68 winter were caused by the occurrence of ground ice together with long snow-cover duration. This unfavourable coincidence is well reproduced by our model results, together with eight of the ten reported difficult winters.


Science of The Total Environment | 2017

Understanding the drivers of extensive plant damage in boreal and Arctic ecosystems: Insights from field surveys in the aftermath of damage

Jarle W. Bjerke; Rachael Treharne; Dagrun Vikhamar-Schuler; Stein Rune Karlsen; Virve Ravolainen; Stef Bokhorst; Gareth K. Phoenix; Zbigniew Bochenek; Hans Tømmervik

The exact cause of population dieback in nature is often challenging to identify retrospectively. Plant research in northern regions has in recent decades been largely focussed on the opposite trend, namely increasing populations and higher productivity. However, a recent unexpected decline in remotely-sensed estimates of terrestrial Arctic primary productivity suggests that warmer northern lands do not necessarily result in higher productivity. As large-scale plant dieback may become more frequent at high northern latitudes with increasing frequency of extreme events, understanding the drivers of plant dieback is especially urgent. Here, we report on recent extensive damage to dominant, short, perennial heath and tundra plant populations in boreal and Arctic Norway, and assess the potential drivers of this damage. In the High-Arctic archipelago of Svalbard, we recorded that 8-50% of Cassiope tetragona and Dryas octopetala shoots were dead, and that the ratios of dead shoots increased from 2014 to 2015. In boreal Norway, 38-63% of Calluna vulgaris shoots were dead, while Vaccinium myrtillus had damage to 91% of shoots in forested sites, but was healthy in non-forested sites. Analyses of numerous sources of environmental information clearly point towards a winter climate-related reason for damage to three of these four species. In Svalbard, the winters of 2011/12 and 2014/15 were documented to be unusually severe, i.e. insulation from ambient temperature fluctuation by snow was largely absent, and ground-ice enforced additional stress. In boreal Norway, the 2013/14 winter had a long period with very little snow combined with extremely low precipitation rates, something which resulted in frost drought of uncovered Calluna plants. However, extensive outbreaks of a leaf-defoliating geometrid moth were identified as the driver of Vaccinium mortality. These results suggest that weather and biotic extreme events potentially have strong impacts on the vegetation state of northern lands.


Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences | 2008

Spatial and temporal variations of Norwegian geohazards in a changing climate, the GeoExtreme Project

Christian Jaedicke; Anders Solheim; Lars Harald Blikra; K. Stalsberg; Asgeir Sorteberg; Asbjørn Aaheim; Kalle Kronholm; Dagrun Vikhamar-Schuler; Ketil Isaksen; K. Sletten; Krister Kristensen; Idar Barstad; C. Melchiorre; Ø. A. Høydal; H. Mestl


Cold Regions Science and Technology | 2013

Traditional Sámi snow terminology and physical snow classification—Two ways of knowing

Inger Marie Gaup Eira; Christian Jaedicke; O.H. Magga; Nancy G. Maynard; Dagrun Vikhamar-Schuler; Svein D. Mathiesen


Proceedings of the 2006 International Snow Science Workshop, Telluride, Colorado | 2006

Forecasting Snow Avalanche Days from Meteorological Data Using Classification Trees; Grasdalen, Western Norway

Kalle Kronholm; Dagrun Vikhamar-Schuler; Christian Jaedicke; Ketil Isaksen; Asgeir Sorteberg; Krister Kristensen


Hydrology Research | 2018

In search of operational snow model structures for the future – comparing four snow models for 17 catchments in Norway

Thomas Skaugen; Hanneke Luijting; Tuomo Saloranta; Dagrun Vikhamar-Schuler; Karsten Müller


The Cryosphere | 2017

Forcing the SURFEX/Crocus snow model with combined hourly meteorological forecasts and gridded observations in southern Norway

Hanneke Luijting; Dagrun Vikhamar-Schuler; Trygve Aspelien; Åsmund Bakketun; Mariken Homleid

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Christian Jaedicke

Norwegian Geotechnical Institute

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Hans Tømmervik

Norwegian University of Science and Technology

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Ketil Isaksen

Norwegian Meteorological Institute

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Hanneke Luijting

Norwegian Meteorological Institute

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Kalle Kronholm

Norwegian Geotechnical Institute

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Krister Kristensen

Norwegian Geotechnical Institute

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Svein D. Mathiesen

Norwegian University of Life Sciences

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