Authors
Ernesto Trujillo, Noah P Molotch, Michael L Goulden, Anne E Kelly, Roger C Bales
Publication date
2012/10
Journal
Nature Geoscience
Volume
5
Issue
10
Pages
705-709
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK
Description
Rising temperatures and declining water availability have influenced the ecological function of mountain forests over the past half-century. For instance, warming in spring and summer and shifts towards earlier snowmelt are associated with an increase in wildfire activity and tree mortality in mountain forests in the western United States,. Temperature increases are expected to continue during the twenty-first century in mountain ecosystems across the globe,, with uncertain consequences. Here, we examine the influence of interannual variations in snowpack accumulation on forest greenness in the Sierra Nevada Mountains, California, between 1982 and 2006. Using observational records of snow accumulation and satellite data on vegetation greenness we show that vegetation greenness increases with snow accumulation. Indeed, we show that variations in maximum snow accumulation explain over 50% of the …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
E Trujillo, NP Molotch, ML Goulden, AE Kelly, RC Bales - Nature Geoscience, 2012
E Trujillo Gomez, NP Molotch, M Goulder, A Kelly… - Nature Geoscience, 2012