Climate change is causing more plants to grow in savanna and tundra
is causing trees and plants to take root in normally barren areas around the world including the Arctic Circle, according to a new study. UK scientists found warmer and wetter weather makes more greenery grow on savannas and tundras, which collectively make up 40 per cent of the world's land. Rapid warming in the Arctic tundra spanning northern , the US, Greenland, northern Europe and has increased shrub plant cover there by 20 per cent over 50 years, the study found. Shrub and tree cover in savannas including Africas plains, Australias outback and dry lands of South America rose by 30 per cent during the same period, as rainfall increased. Both kinds of ecosystem could be threatened in various ways by the presence of more wooden plants, including wild fires and animal grazing patterns. This research indicates the far-reaching effects of climate change across the planet, said study leader Mariana Garcia Criado, a PhD researcher at the University of Edinburgh and corresponding author of the study. Uncovering the ways in which different landscapes are responding requires collaboration among scientists, and cooperation with local peoples to better understand the changes were seeing and their impacts from different perspectives. Garcia Criado is part of Team Shrub, an organisation made up of ecologists from different institutions that investigate climate change impacts in tundras. Shrubs have been growing taller, faster and expanding into new areas in the tundra as Arctic temperatures have warmed over the last few decade. Team Shrub researchers have been vising a site called Experts say the dramatic changes to tundra and savanna regions vast, open areas that contain unique biodiversity could alter the global carbon balance and climate system. This is because woody plants store carbon, provide fuel for fires and influence how much of the suns heat is reflected back into space. Small variations in carbon could impact efforts to keep warming below 3.6oF (2C) a key target of the Paris Agreement. But more woody plants could alter the unique biodiversity of areas home to diverse species including caribou in the tundra and elephants in the savanna, researchers say. Tundras are treeless regions found in the Arctic and on mountain tops where the climate is cold and windy and trees usually struggle to grow. Savanna or tropical grasslands, meanwhile, are hot, dry and scattered with trees and shrubs found in central Africa, northern Australia and South America. The new global study by researchers at the University of Edinburgh is the largest of its kind to date to find out how these areas have changed over time. They compared temperature and rainfall data with more than 1,000 records of plant cover change from almost 900 sites across six continents. The team concluded that woody encroachment was widespread geographically and across climate gradients. Expanding shrub cover in the Arctic could raise soil temperatures and lead to frozen ground containing nearly half of the world's soil carbon to thaw. They also found that other factors including wild fires and animal grazing patterns affect shrub and tree cover. Overall, woody encroachment was positively related to warming in the tundra and increased rainfall in the savanna. Our findings highlight the complex nature of climate change impacts in biomes limited by seasonality, which should be accounted for to realistically estimate future responses across open biomes under global change scenarios, the researchers write in their study, published in . In the last year, Team Shrub researchers have also used drone and satellite technology to observe how green patches the size of football fields cover Arctic regions. Their research paper, published earlier this year in , says that Arctic greening and browning trends are more complex, variable and inherently scale-dependent than previously thought'.