European Commission logo
English English
CORDIS - EU research results
CORDIS

A glimpse into the Arctic future: equipping a unique natural experiment for next-generation ecosystem research

Project description

Climate change impact on Arctic ecosystems

Climate change affects Arctic ecosystems more than any other ecosystem. Global warming allows atmospheric carbon stored in the Arctic soils for millions of years to escape in the form of CO2 and the strong greenhouse agent CH4. Scientists should detect how much carbon will potentially be released and its impact on climate change. The ForHot site in Iceland offers a geothermally controlled soil temperature warming gradient, allowing assessment of temperature increase impact on Arctic ecosystem processes. The EU-funded FutureArctic project will train early-stage researchers to deliver ‘ecosystem-of-things’. The project will use machine learning to analyse large high throughput environmental data streams by installing a pioneer ‘ecosystem-of-things’ at the ForHot site.

Objective

"Climate change will affect Arctic ecosystems more than any other ecosystem worldwide, with temperature increases expected up to 4-6°C. While this is threatening the integrity and biodiversity of the ecosystems in itself, the larger ecosystem feedbacks triggered by this change are even more worrisome. During millions of years, atmospheric carbon has been stored in the Arctic soils. With warming, the carbon can rapidly escape the soils in the form of CO2 and (even worse) the strong greenhouse agent CH4.
Despite decades of research, scientists still struggle to unveil the scale of this carbon exchange, and especially how it will interact with climate change. An overarching question remains: how much carbon will potentially escape the Arctic in the future climate, and how will this affect climate change?
FutureArctic embeds this research challenge directly in an inter-sectoral training initiative for early stage researchers, that aims to form “ecosystem-of-things” scientists and engineers at the ForHot site. The FORHOT site in Iceland offers a geothermally controlled soil temperature warming gradient, to study how Arctic ecosystem processes are affected by temperature increases as expected through climate change.
FutureArctic aims to pave the way for generalized permanently connected data acquisition systems for key environmental variables and processes. We will initiate a new machine-learning approach to analyse large high-throughput environmental data-streams, through installing a pioneer ""ecosystem-of-things"" at the ForHot site.
FutureArctic will thus channel, building on a timely project in the ForHot area, an important evolution to machine-assisted environmental fundamental research. This is achieved through the dedicated training of researchers with profiles at the inter-sectoral edge of computer science, artificial intelligence, environmental science (both experimental and modelling), scoial sciences and sensor engineering and communication.
"

Coordinator

UNIVERSITEIT ANTWERPEN
Net EU contribution
€ 256 320,00
Address
PRINSSTRAAT 13
2000 Antwerpen
Belgium

See on map

Region
Vlaams Gewest Prov. Antwerpen Arr. Antwerpen
Activity type
Higher or Secondary Education Establishments
Links
Total cost
€ 256 320,00

Participants (12)

Partners (2)