Season to supply an annual estimate. Keller et al. (2010) E-982 measured strontium isotope ratios (87Sr86Sr), which decrease with depth in soils in the Arctic LTER, to estimate the rising depth of water flow within the soil. Working with the point-frame strategy described by Walker (1996), Gould and Mercado-Diaz (in Shaver et al. 2014) monitored the response of plant communities to ambient climate in 155 permanent plots. Measurements had been made at 5- to 7-year intervals because 1989 in two 1 km2 grids setTable 2 Environmental and ecological variables measured over the long-term at Toolik and Zackenberg websites Web page Toolik Web page Climate Thaw depth Biology Kuparuk River Climate, physics Biology Climatic norms for river basin (1989010) and discharge and temperature (1972010) are in Bowden et al. (2014) Key production and respiration (1984998), epilithic chlorophyll (1983010), bryophyte cover (1992006), benthic insect taxa (1984998), and grayling development (1985005) information are in Bowden et al. (2014) Epilimnion temperature (July, 1985007) and summer season alkalinity (1975011) data are in Luecke et al. (2014) Chlorophyll (July, 1985010) data are in Luecke et al. (2014) Temperature, 1991005, wind direction and speed (1985005), and precipitation, 1997005, are given in Hansen et al. (2008). Information are out there at Greenland Ecosystem Monitoring (http:www.information.g-e-m.dk) The summer time thaw depth progression from June 1 to September 7 at ZEROCALM-2, 1996005, is given in Christiansen et al. (2008) Plant communities were analyzed (1997, 2008) in relation to summer time temperature and spring snow cover. Five replicate plots in eight plant communities were sampled (Schmidt et al. 2012). NDVI measures (Tagesson et al. 2012) gave gross major production in the peak of the expanding season from 1992 to 2008 Precipitation, temperature, and snow depth measured hourly (1996010). Abundance of 6 plant species, six taxa of arthropods, 4 species of birds, and three mammals measured weekly and seasonally (Mortensen et al. 2014). At two lakes, temperature, ice cover, and nutrients were measured (1997005) at the same time as volume of phytoplankton and abundance of zooplankton (Christoffersen et al. 2008) Air temperature, precipitation, wind speed and direction, and increasing season dates for 1989010 are in Cherry et al. (2014) Summer depths of thaw for July and August within the Tussock Watershed, 1989010, are in Kling et al. (2014) Net primary production aboveground for moist acidic tundra from 6 harvests 1989000 and point-frame data (4 harvests 1989008) are in Shaver et al. (2014) Environmental and ecological variablesToolik Lake Physics and chemistry Biology Zackenberg Physics Thaw depth Plant communities and production Variations and trends in biotic and abiotic PubMed ID:http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21300681 ecosystem compartmentsThe Author(s) 2017. This article is published with open access at Springerlink.com www.kva.seenAmbio 2017, 46(Suppl. 1):S160SFig. two Annual mean Barrow SAT (surface air temperature, closed circles) for 1950014, annual imply Toolik SAT (x’s) for 1989-2014, and Zackenberg SAT (open squares) for 1996014. Also shown would be the linear regressions for Barrow 1950014 (dashed dot line), Barrow 1996014 (short-dashed line), Toolik 1996014 (long-dashed line), and Zackenberg 1996014 (dotted line). Regression lines and coefficients are ordered from prime to bottom as Toolik, Zackenberg, Barrow (1996014), and Barrow (1950014). Only the Barrow 1950014 and Zackenberg 1996014 linear regressions are considerable (p \ 0.01). Data from Alaska Climate Study Ce.