2023
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Pan-Arctic soil element bioavailability estimations
Peter Stimmler,
Mathias Goeckede,
Bo Elberling,
Susan M. Natali,
Peter Kuhry,
Nia Perron,
Fabrice Lacroix,
Gustaf Hugelius,
Oliver Sonnentag,
Jens Strauß,
C. Minions,
Michael Sommer,
Jörg Schaller
Earth System Science Data, Volume 15, Issue 3
Abstract. Arctic soils store large amounts of organic carbon and other elements, such as amorphous silicon, silicon, calcium, iron, aluminum, and phosphorous. Global warming is projected to be most pronounced in the Arctic, leading to thawing permafrost which, in turn, changes the soil element availability. To project how biogeochemical cycling in Arctic ecosystems will be affected by climate change, there is a need for data on element availability. Here, we analyzed the amorphous silicon (ASi) content as a solid fraction of the soils as well as Mehlich III extractions for the bioavailability of silicon (Si), calcium (Ca), iron (Fe), phosphorus (P), and aluminum (Al) from 574 soil samples from the circumpolar Arctic region. We show large differences in the ASi fraction and in Si, Ca, Fe, Al, and P availability among different lithologies and Arctic regions. We summarize these data in pan-Arctic maps of the ASi fraction and available Si, Ca, Fe, P, and Al concentrations, focusing on the top 100 cm of Arctic soil. Furthermore, we provide element availability values for the organic and mineral layers of the seasonally thawing active layer as well as for the uppermost permafrost layer. Our spatially explicit data on differences in the availability of elements between the different lithological classes and regions now and in the future will improve Arctic Earth system models for estimating current and future carbon and nutrient feedbacks under climate change (https://doi.org/10.17617/3.8KGQUN, Schaller and Goeckede, 2022).
2020
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Lability classification of soil organic matter in the northern permafrost region
Peter Kuhry,
Jiří Bárta,
Daan Blok,
Bo Elberling,
Samuel Faucherre,
Gustaf Hugelius,
Christian Juncher Jørgensen,
Andreas Richter,
Hana Šantrüčková,
Niels Weiss
Biogeosciences, Volume 17, Issue 2
Abstract. The large stocks of soil organic carbon (SOC) in soils and deposits of the northern permafrost region are sensitive to global warming and permafrost thawing. The potential release of this carbon (C) as greenhouse gases to the atmosphere does not only depend on the total quantity of soil organic matter (SOM) affected by warming and thawing, but it also depends on its lability (i.e., the rate at which it will decay). In this study we develop a simple and robust classification scheme of SOM lability for the main types of soils and deposits in the northern permafrost region. The classification is based on widely available soil geochemical parameters and landscape unit classes, which makes it useful for upscaling to the entire northern permafrost region. We have analyzed the relationship between C content and C-CO2 production rates of soil samples in two different types of laboratory incubation experiments. In one experiment, ca. 240 soil samples from four study areas were incubated using the same protocol (at 5 ∘C, aerobically) over a period of 1 year. Here we present C release rates measured on day 343 of incubation. These long-term results are compared to those obtained from short-term incubations of ca. 1000 samples (at 12 ∘C, aerobically) from an additional three study areas. In these experiments, C-CO2 production rates were measured over the first 4 d of incubation. We have focused our analyses on the relationship between C-CO2 production per gram dry weight per day (µgC-CO2 gdw−1 d−1) and C content (%C of dry weight) in the samples, but we show that relationships are consistent when using C ∕ N ratios or different production units such as µgC per gram soil C per day (µgC-CO2 gC−1 d−1) or per cm3 of soil per day (µgC-CO2 cm−3 d−1). C content of the samples is positively correlated to C-CO2 production rates but explains less than 50 % of the observed variability when the full datasets are considered. A partitioning of the data into landscape units greatly reduces variance and provides consistent results between incubation experiments. These results indicate that relative SOM lability decreases in the order of Late Holocene eolian deposits to alluvial deposits and mineral soils (including peaty wetlands) to Pleistocene yedoma deposits to C-enriched pockets in cryoturbated soils to peat deposits. Thus, three of the most important SOC storage classes in the northern permafrost region (yedoma, cryoturbated soils and peatlands) show low relative SOM lability. Previous research has suggested that SOM in these pools is relatively undecomposed, and the reasons for the observed low rates of decomposition in our experiments need urgent attention if we want to better constrain the magnitude of the thawing permafrost carbon feedback on global warming.
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Carbon release through abrupt permafrost thaw
M. R. Turetsky,
Benjamin W. Abbott,
Miriam C. Jones,
K. M. Walter Anthony,
David Olefeldt,
Edward A. G. Schuur,
Guido Grosse,
Peter Kuhry,
Gustaf Hugelius,
Charles D. Koven,
David M. Lawrence,
Carolyn Gibson,
A. Britta K. Sannel,
A. David McGuire
Nature Geoscience, Volume 13, Issue 2
2019
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Permafrost collapse is accelerating carbon release
M. R. Turetsky,
Benjamin W. Abbott,
Miriam C. Jones,
K. M. Walter Anthony,
David Olefeldt,
Edward A. G. Schuur,
C. Koven,
A. D. McGuire,
Guido Grosse,
Peter Kuhry,
Gustaf Hugelius,
David M. Lawrence,
Carolyn Gibson,
A. Britta K. Sannel
Nature, Volume 569, Issue 7754
The sudden collapse of thawing soils in the Arctic might double the warming from greenhouse gases released from tundra, warn Merritt R. Turetsky and colleagues. The sudden collapse of thawing soils in the Arctic might double the warming from greenhouse gases released from tundra, warn Merritt R. Turetsky and colleagues.
In this study we assess the total storage, landscape distribution, and vertical partitioning of soil organic carbon (SOC) stocks on the Brogger Peninsula, Svalbard. This type of high Arctic...