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).
2022
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Burned Area and Carbon Emissions Across Northwestern Boreal North America from 2001–2019
Stefano Potter,
S. Cooperdock,
Sander Veraverbeke,
Xanthe J. Walker,
Michelle C. Mack,
Scott J. Goetz,
Jennifer L. Baltzer,
L. L. Bourgeau-Chavez,
Arden Burrell,
Catherine M. Dieleman,
Nancy H. F. French,
Stijn Hantson,
Elizabeth Hoy,
Liza K. Jenkins,
Jill F. Johnstone,
Evan S. Kane,
Susan M. Natali,
James T. Randerson,
M. R. Turetsky,
Ellen Whitman,
Elizabeth B. Wiggins,
Brendan M. Rogers
Abstract. Fire is the dominant disturbance agent in Alaskan and Canadian boreal ecosystems and releases large amounts of carbon into the atmosphere. Burned area and carbon emissions have been increasing with climate change, which have the potential to alter the carbon balance and shift the region from a historic sink to a source. It is therefore critically important to track the spatiotemporal changes in burned area and fire carbon emissions over time. Here we developed a new burned area detection algorithm between 2001–2019 across Alaska and Canada at 500 meters (m) resolution that utilizes finer-scale 30 m Landsat imagery to account for land cover unsuitable for burning. This method strictly balances omission and commission errors at 500 m to derive accurate landscape- and regional-scale burned area estimates. Using this new burned area product, we developed statistical models to predict burn depth and carbon combustion for the same period within the NASA Arctic-Boreal Vulnerability Experiment (ABoVE) core and extended domain. Statistical models were constrained using a database of field observations across the domain and were related to a variety of response variables including remotely-sensed indicators of fire severity, fire weather indices, local climate, soils, and topographic indicators. The burn depth and aboveground combustion models performed best, with poorer performance for belowground combustion. We estimate 2.37 million hectares (Mha) burned annually between 2001–2019 over the ABoVE domain (2.87 Mha across all of Alaska and Canada), emitting 79.3 +/- 27.96 (+/- 1 standard deviation) Teragrams of carbon (C) per year, with a mean combustion rate of 3.13 +/- 1.17 kilograms C m-2. Mean combustion and burn depth displayed a general gradient of higher severity in the northwestern portion of the domain to lower severity in the south and east. We also found larger fire years and later season burning were generally associated with greater mean combustion. Our estimates are generally consistent with previous efforts to quantify burned area, fire carbon emissions, and their drivers in regions within boreal North America; however, we generally estimate higher burned area and carbon emissions due to our use of Landsat imagery, greater availability of field observations, and improvements in modeling. The burned area and combustion data sets described here (the ABoVE Fire Emissions Database, or ABoVE-FED) can be used for local to continental-scale applications of boreal fire science.
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Range shifts in a foundation sedge potentially induce large Arctic ecosystem carbon losses and gains
Salvatore R. Curasi,
Ned Fetcher,
Rebecca E. Hewitt,
Peter M. Lafleur,
M. M. Loranty,
Michelle C. Mack,
Jeremy L. May,
Isla H. Myers‐Smith,
Susan M. Natali,
Steven F. Oberbauer,
Thomas C. Parker,
Oliver Sonnentag,
S. A. Vargas Zesati,
Stan D. Wullschleger,
A. V. Rocha
Environmental Research Letters, Volume 17, Issue 4
Abstract Foundation species have disproportionately large impacts on ecosystem structure and function. As a result, future changes to their distribution may be important determinants of ecosystem carbon (C) cycling in a warmer world. We assessed the role of a foundation tussock sedge ( Eriophorum vaginatum ) as a climatically vulnerable C stock using field data, a machine learning ecological niche model, and an ensemble of terrestrial biosphere models (TBMs). Field data indicated that tussock density has decreased by ~0.97 tussocks per m2 over the past ~38 years on Alaska’s North Slope from ~1981 to 2019. This declining trend is concerning because tussocks are a large Arctic C stock, which enhances soil organic layer C stocks by 6.9% on average and represents 745 Tg C across our study area. By 2100, we project that changes in tussock density may decrease the tussock C stock by 41% in regions where tussocks are currently abundant (e.g. -0.8 tussocks per m2 and -85 Tg C on the North Slope) and may increase the tussock C stock by 46% in regions where tussocks are currently scarce (e.g. +0.9 tussocks per m2 and +81 Tg C on Victoria Island). These climate-induced changes to the tussock C stock were comparable to, but sometimes opposite in sign, to vegetation C stock changes predicted by an ensemble of TBMs. Our results illustrate the important role of tussocks as a foundation species in determining future Arctic C stocks and highlights the need for better representation of this species in TBMs.
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The ABCflux database: Arctic–boreal CO<sub>2</sub> flux observations and ancillary information aggregated to monthly time steps across terrestrial ecosystems
Anna-Maria Virkkala,
Susan M. Natali,
Brendan M. Rogers,
Jennifer D. Watts,
K. E. Savage,
Sara June Connon,
Marguerite Mauritz,
Edward A. G. Schuur,
D. L. Peter,
C. Minions,
Julia Nojeim,
R. Commane,
Craig A. Emmerton,
Mathias Goeckede,
Manuel Helbig,
David Holl,
Hiroyasu Iwata,
Hideki Kobayashi,
Pasi Kolari,
Efrén López‐Blanco,
Maija E. Marushchak,
Mikhail Mastepanov,
Lutz Merbold,
Frans‐Jan W. Parmentier,
Matthias Peichl,
Torsten Sachs,
Oliver Sonnentag,
Masahito Ueyama,
Carolina Voigt,
Mika Aurela,
Julia Boike,
Gerardo Celis,
Namyi Chae,
Torben R. Christensen,
M. Syndonia Bret‐Harte,
Sigrid Dengel,
A. J. Dolman,
C. Edgar,
Bo Elberling,
Eugénie Euskirchen,
Achim Grelle,
Juha Hatakka,
Elyn Humphreys,
Järvi Järveoja,
Ayumi Kotani,
Lars Kutzbach,
Tuomas Laurila,
Annalea Lohila,
Ivan Mammarella,
Yukiko Matsuura,
Gesa Meyer,
Mats Nilsson,
Steven F. Oberbauer,
Sang Jong Park,
Roman E. Petrov,
А. С. Прокушкин,
Christopher Schulze,
Vincent L. St. Louis,
Eeva‐Stiina Tuittila,
Juha‐Pekka Tuovinen,
William L. Quinton,
Andrej Varlagin,
Donatella Zona,
Viacheslav I. Zyryanov
Earth System Science Data, Volume 14, Issue 1
Abstract. Past efforts to synthesize and quantify the magnitude and change in carbon dioxide (CO2) fluxes in terrestrial ecosystems across the rapidly warming Arctic–boreal zone (ABZ) have provided valuable information but were limited in their geographical and temporal coverage. Furthermore, these efforts have been based on data aggregated over varying time periods, often with only minimal site ancillary data, thus limiting their potential to be used in large-scale carbon budget assessments. To bridge these gaps, we developed a standardized monthly database of Arctic–boreal CO2 fluxes (ABCflux) that aggregates in situ measurements of terrestrial net ecosystem CO2 exchange and its derived partitioned component fluxes: gross primary productivity and ecosystem respiration. The data span from 1989 to 2020 with over 70 supporting variables that describe key site conditions (e.g., vegetation and disturbance type), micrometeorological and environmental measurements (e.g., air and soil temperatures), and flux measurement techniques. Here, we describe these variables, the spatial and temporal distribution of observations, the main strengths and limitations of the database, and the potential research opportunities it enables. In total, ABCflux includes 244 sites and 6309 monthly observations; 136 sites and 2217 monthly observations represent tundra, and 108 sites and 4092 observations represent the boreal biome. The database includes fluxes estimated with chamber (19 % of the monthly observations), snow diffusion (3 %) and eddy covariance (78 %) techniques. The largest number of observations were collected during the climatological summer (June–August; 32 %), and fewer observations were available for autumn (September–October; 25 %), winter (December–February; 18 %), and spring (March–May; 25 %). ABCflux can be used in a wide array of empirical, remote sensing and modeling studies to improve understanding of the regional and temporal variability in CO2 fluxes and to better estimate the terrestrial ABZ CO2 budget. ABCflux is openly and freely available online (Virkkala et al., 2021b, https://doi.org/10.3334/ORNLDAAC/1934).
Future warming of the Arctic not only threatens to destabilize the enormous pool of organic carbon accumulated in permafrost soils but may also mobilize elements such as calcium (Ca) or silicon (Si). While for Greenlandic soils, it was recently shown that both elements may have a strong effect on carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) production with Ca strongly decreasing and Si increasing CO 2 production, little is known about the effects of Si and Ca on carbon cycle processes in soils from Siberia, the Canadian Shield, or Alaska. In this study, we incubated five different soils (rich organic soil from the Canadian Shield and from Siberia (one from the top and one from the deeper soil layer) and one acidic and one non-acidic soil from Alaska) for 6 months under both drained and waterlogged conditions and at different Ca and amorphous Si (ASi) concentrations. Our results show a strong decrease in soil CO 2 production for all soils under both drained and waterlogged conditions with increasing Ca concentrations. The ASi effect was not clear across the different soils used, with soil CO 2 production increasing, decreasing, or not being significantly affected depending on the soil type and if the soils were initially drained or waterlogged. We found no methane production in any of the soils regardless of treatment. Taking into account the predicted change in Si and Ca availability under a future warmer Arctic climate, the associated fertilization effects would imply potentially lower greenhouse gas production from Siberia and slightly increased greenhouse gas emissions from the Canadian Shield. Including Ca as a controlling factor for Arctic soil CO 2 production rates may, therefore, reduces uncertainties in modeling future scenarios on how Arctic regions may respond to climate change.
2021
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The Boreal-Arctic Wetland and Lake Dataset (BAWLD)
David Olefeldt,
Mikael Hovemyr,
McKenzie A. Kuhn,
David Bastviken,
Theodore J. Bohn,
John Connolly,
Patrick Crill,
Eugénie Euskirchen,
S. A. Finkelstein,
Hélène Genet,
Guido Grosse,
Lorna I. Harris,
Liam Heffernan,
Manuel Helbig,
Gustaf Hugelius,
Ryan H. S. Hutchins,
Sari Juutinen,
Mark J. Lara,
Avni Malhotra,
Kristen L. Manies,
A. David McGuire,
Susan M. Natali,
J. A. O’Donnell,
Frans‐Jan W. Parmentier,
Aleksi Räsänen,
Christina Schädel,
Oliver Sonnentag,
Maria Strack,
Suzanne E. Tank,
Claire C. Treat,
R. K. Varner,
Tarmo Virtanen,
Rebecca K. Warren,
Jennifer D. Watts
Abstract. Methane emissions from boreal and arctic wetlands, lakes, and rivers are expected to increase in response to warming and associated permafrost thaw. However, the lack of appropriate land cover datasets for scaling field-measured methane emissions to circumpolar scales has contributed to a large uncertainty for our understanding of present-day and future methane emissions. Here we present the Boreal-Arctic Wetland and Lake Dataset (BAWLD), a land cover dataset based on an expert assessment, extrapolated using random forest modelling from available spatial datasets of climate, topography, soils, permafrost conditions, vegetation, wetlands, and surface water extents and dynamics. In BAWLD, we estimate the fractional coverage of five wetland, seven lake, and three river classes within 0.5 × 0.5° grid cells that cover the northern boreal and tundra biomes (17 % of the global land surface). Land cover classes were defined using criteria that ensured distinct methane emissions among classes, as indicated by a co-developed comprehensive dataset of methane flux observations. In BAWLD, wetlands occupied 3.2 × 106 km2 (14 % of domain) with a 95 % confidence interval between 2.8 and 3.8 × 106 km2. Bog, fen, and permafrost bog were the most abundant wetland classes, covering ~28 % each of the total wetland area, while the highest methane emitting marsh and tundra wetland classes occupied 5 and 12 %, respectively. Lakes, defined to include all lentic open-water ecosystems regardless of size, covered 1.4 × 106 km2 (6 % of domain). Low methane-emitting large lakes (> 10 km2) and glacial lakes jointly represented 78 % of the total lake area, while high-emitting peatland and yedoma lakes covered 18 and 4 %, respectively. Small (< 0.1 km2) glacial, peatland, and yedoma lakes combined covered 17 % of the total lake area, but contributed disproportionally to the overall spatial uncertainty of lake area with a 95 % confidence interval between 0.15 and 0.38 × 106 km2. Rivers and streams were estimated to cover 0.12 × 106 km2 (0.5 % of domain) of which 8 % was associated with high-methane emitting headwaters that drain organic-rich landscapes. Distinct combinations of spatially co-occurring wetland and lake classes were identified across the BAWLD domain, allowing for the mapping of “wetscapes” that will have characteristic methane emission magnitudes and sensitivities to climate change at regional scales. With BAWLD, we provide a dataset which avoids double-accounting of wetland, lake and river extents, and which includes confidence intervals for each land cover class. As such, BAWLD will be suitable for many hydrological and biogeochemical modelling and upscaling efforts for the northern Boreal and Arctic region, in particular those aimed at improving assessments of current and future methane emissions. Data is freely available at https://doi.org/10.18739/A2C824F9X (Olefeldt et al., 2021).
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Statistical upscaling of ecosystem CO <sub>2</sub> fluxes across the terrestrial tundra and boreal domain: Regional patterns and uncertainties
Anna‐Maria Virkkala,
Juha Aalto,
Brendan M. Rogers,
Torbern Tagesson,
Claire C. Treat,
Susan M. Natali,
Jennifer D. Watts,
Stefano Potter,
Aleksi Lehtonen,
Marguerite Mauritz,
Edward A. G. Schuur,
John Kochendorfer,
Donatella Zona,
Walter C. Oechel,
Hideki Kobayashi,
Elyn Humphreys,
Mathias Goeckede,
Hiroyasu Iwata,
Peter M. Lafleur,
Eugénie Euskirchen,
Stef Bokhorst,
Maija E. Marushchak,
Pertti J. Martikainen,
Bo Elberling,
Carolina Voigt,
Christina Biasi,
Oliver Sonnentag,
Frans‐Jan W. Parmentier,
Masahito Ueyama,
Gerardo Celis,
Vincent L. St. Louis,
Craig A. Emmerton,
Matthias Peichl,
Jinshu Chi,
Järvi Järveoja,
Mats Nilsson,
Steven F. Oberbauer,
M. S. Torn,
Sang Jong Park,
A. J. Dolman,
Ivan Mammarella,
Namyi Chae,
Rafael Poyatos,
Efrén López‐Blanco,
Torben R. Christensen,
Mi Hye Kwon,
Torsten Sachs,
David Holl,
Miska Luoto
Global Change Biology, Volume 27, Issue 17
The regional variability in tundra and boreal carbon dioxide (CO2) fluxes can be high, complicating efforts to quantify sink-source patterns across the entire region. Statistical models are increasingly used to predict (i.e., upscale) CO2 fluxes across large spatial domains, but the reliability of different modeling techniques, each with different specifications and assumptions, has not been assessed in detail. Here, we compile eddy covariance and chamber measurements of annual and growing season CO2 fluxes of gross primary productivity (GPP), ecosystem respiration (ER), and net ecosystem exchange (NEE) during 1990–2015 from 148 terrestrial high-latitude (i.e., tundra and boreal) sites to analyze the spatial patterns and drivers of CO2 fluxes and test the accuracy and uncertainty of different statistical models. CO2 fluxes were upscaled at relatively high spatial resolution (1 km2) across the high-latitude region using five commonly used statistical models and their ensemble, that is, the median of all five models, using climatic, vegetation, and soil predictors. We found the performance of machine learning and ensemble predictions to outperform traditional regression methods. We also found the predictive performance of NEE-focused models to be low, relative to models predicting GPP and ER. Our data compilation and ensemble predictions showed that CO2 sink strength was larger in the boreal biome (observed and predicted average annual NEE −46 and −29 g C m−2 yr−1, respectively) compared to tundra (average annual NEE +10 and −2 g C m−2 yr−1). This pattern was associated with large spatial variability, reflecting local heterogeneity in soil organic carbon stocks, climate, and vegetation productivity. The terrestrial ecosystem CO2 budget, estimated using the annual NEE ensemble prediction, suggests the high-latitude region was on average an annual CO2 sink during 1990–2015, although uncertainty remains high.
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Soil respiration strongly offsets carbon uptake in Alaska and Northwest Canada
Jennifer D. Watts,
Susan M. Natali,
C. Minions,
D. A. Risk,
Kyle A. Arndt,
Donatella Zona,
Eugénie Euskirchen,
A. V. Rocha,
Oliver Sonnentag,
Manuel Helbig,
Aram Kalhori,
W. C. Oechel,
Hiroki Ikawa,
Masahito Ueyama,
Rikie Suzuki,
Hideki Kobayashi,
Gerardo Celis,
Edward A. G. Schuur,
Elyn Humphreys,
Yongwon Kim,
Bang-Yong Lee,
Scott J. Goetz,
Nima Madani,
Luke Schiferl,
R. Commane,
J. S. Kimball,
Zhihua Liu,
M. S. Torn,
Stefano Potter,
Jonathan Wang,
M. Torre Jorgenson,
Jingfeng Xiao,
Xing Li,
C. Edgar
Environmental Research Letters, Volume 16, Issue 8
Abstract Soil respiration (i.e. from soils and roots) provides one of the largest global fluxes of carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) to the atmosphere and is likely to increase with warming, yet the magnitude of soil respiration from rapidly thawing Arctic-boreal regions is not well understood. To address this knowledge gap, we first compiled a new CO 2 flux database for permafrost-affected tundra and boreal ecosystems in Alaska and Northwest Canada. We then used the CO 2 database, multi-sensor satellite imagery, and random forest models to assess the regional magnitude of soil respiration. The flux database includes a new Soil Respiration Station network of chamber-based fluxes, and fluxes from eddy covariance towers. Our site-level data, spanning September 2016 to August 2017, revealed that the largest soil respiration emissions occurred during the summer (June–August) and that summer fluxes were higher in boreal sites (1.87 ± 0.67 g CO 2 –C m −2 d −1 ) relative to tundra (0.94 ± 0.4 g CO 2 –C m −2 d −1 ). We also observed considerable emissions (boreal: 0.24 ± 0.2 g CO 2 –C m −2 d −1 ; tundra: 0.18 ± 0.16 g CO 2 –C m −2 d −1 ) from soils during the winter (November–March) despite frozen surface conditions. Our model estimates indicated an annual region-wide loss from soil respiration of 591 ± 120 Tg CO 2 –C during the 2016–2017 period. Summer months contributed to 58% of the regional soil respiration, winter months contributed to 15%, and the shoulder months contributed to 27%. In total, soil respiration offset 54% of annual gross primary productivity (GPP) across the study domain. We also found that in tundra environments, transitional tundra/boreal ecotones, and in landscapes recently affected by fire, soil respiration often exceeded GPP, resulting in a net annual source of CO 2 to the atmosphere. As this region continues to warm, soil respiration may increasingly offset GPP, further amplifying global climate change.
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The Boreal–Arctic Wetland and Lake Dataset (BAWLD)
David Olefeldt,
Mikael Hovemyr,
McKenzie A. Kuhn,
David Bastviken,
Theodore J. Bohn,
John Connolly,
Patrick Crill,
Eugénie Euskirchen,
S. A. Finkelstein,
Hélène Genet,
Guido Grosse,
Lorna I. Harris,
Liam Heffernan,
Manuel Helbig,
Gustaf Hugelius,
Ryan H. S. Hutchins,
Sari Juutinen,
Mark J. Lara,
Avni Malhotra,
Kristen L. Manies,
A. David McGuire,
Susan M. Natali,
J. A. O’Donnell,
Frans-Jan W. Parmentier,
Aleksi Räsänen,
Christina Schädel,
Oliver Sonnentag,
Maria Strack,
Suzanne E. Tank,
Claire C. Treat,
Ruth K. Varner,
Tarmo Virtanen,
Rebecca K. Warren,
Jennifer D. Watts
Earth System Science Data, Volume 13, Issue 11
Abstract. Methane emissions from boreal and arctic wetlands, lakes, and rivers are expected to increase in response to warming and associated permafrost thaw. However, the lack of appropriate land cover datasets for scaling field-measured methane emissions to circumpolar scales has contributed to a large uncertainty for our understanding of present-day and future methane emissions. Here we present the Boreal–Arctic Wetland and Lake Dataset (BAWLD), a land cover dataset based on an expert assessment, extrapolated using random forest modelling from available spatial datasets of climate, topography, soils, permafrost conditions, vegetation, wetlands, and surface water extents and dynamics. In BAWLD, we estimate the fractional coverage of five wetland, seven lake, and three river classes within 0.5 × 0.5∘ grid cells that cover the northern boreal and tundra biomes (17 % of the global land surface). Land cover classes were defined using criteria that ensured distinct methane emissions among classes, as indicated by a co-developed comprehensive dataset of methane flux observations. In BAWLD, wetlands occupied 3.2 × 106 km2 (14 % of domain) with a 95 % confidence interval between 2.8 and 3.8 × 106 km2. Bog, fen, and permafrost bog were the most abundant wetland classes, covering ∼ 28 % each of the total wetland area, while the highest-methane-emitting marsh and tundra wetland classes occupied 5 % and 12 %, respectively. Lakes, defined to include all lentic open-water ecosystems regardless of size, covered 1.4 × 106 km2 (6 % of domain). Low-methane-emitting large lakes (>10 km2) and glacial lakes jointly represented 78 % of the total lake area, while high-emitting peatland and yedoma lakes covered 18 % and 4 %, respectively. Small (<0.1 km2) glacial, peatland, and yedoma lakes combined covered 17 % of the total lake area but contributed disproportionally to the overall spatial uncertainty in lake area with a 95 % confidence interval between 0.15 and 0.38 × 106 km2. Rivers and streams were estimated to cover 0.12 × 106 km2 (0.5 % of domain), of which 8 % was associated with high-methane-emitting headwaters that drain organic-rich landscapes. Distinct combinations of spatially co-occurring wetland and lake classes were identified across the BAWLD domain, allowing for the mapping of “wetscapes” that have characteristic methane emission magnitudes and sensitivities to climate change at regional scales. With BAWLD, we provide a dataset which avoids double-accounting of wetland, lake, and river extents and which includes confidence intervals for each land cover class. As such, BAWLD will be suitable for many hydrological and biogeochemical modelling and upscaling efforts for the northern boreal and arctic region, in particular those aimed at improving assessments of current and future methane emissions. Data are freely available at https://doi.org/10.18739/A2C824F9X (Olefeldt et al., 2021).
2020
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Shallow soils are warmer under trees and tall shrubs across Arctic and Boreal ecosystems
Heather Kropp,
M. M. Loranty,
Susan M. Natali,
Alexander Kholodov,
A. V. Rocha,
Isla H. Myers‐Smith,
Benjamin W Abbot,
Jakob Abermann,
E. Blanc‐Betes,
Daan Blok,
Gesche Blume‐Werry,
Julia Boike,
A. L. Breen,
Sean M. P. Cahoon,
Casper T. Christiansen,
Thomas A. Douglas,
Howard E. Epstein,
G. V. Frost,
Mathias Goeckede,
Toke T. Høye,
Steven D. Mamet,
J. A. O’Donnell,
David Olefeldt,
Gareth K. Phoenix,
V. G. Salmon,
A. Britta K. Sannel,
Sharon L. Smith,
Oliver Sonnentag,
Lydia Smith Vaughn,
Mathew Williams,
Bo Elberling,
Laura Gough,
Jan Hjort,
Peter M. Lafleur,
Eugénie Euskirchen,
M.M.P.D. Heijmans,
Elyn Humphreys,
Hiroyasu Iwata,
Benjamin M. Jones,
M. Torre Jorgenson,
Inge Grünberg,
Yongwon Kim,
James A. Laundre,
Marguerite Mauritz,
Anders Michelsen,
Gabriela Schaepman‐Strub,
Ken D. Tape,
Masahito Ueyama,
Bang-Yong Lee,
Kirsty Langley,
Magnus Lund
Environmental Research Letters, Volume 16, Issue 1
Abstract Soils are warming as air temperatures rise across the Arctic and Boreal region concurrent with the expansion of tall-statured shrubs and trees in the tundra. Changes in vegetation structure and function are expected to alter soil thermal regimes, thereby modifying climate feedbacks related to permafrost thaw and carbon cycling. However, current understanding of vegetation impacts on soil temperature is limited to local or regional scales and lacks the generality necessary to predict soil warming and permafrost stability on a pan-Arctic scale. Here we synthesize shallow soil and air temperature observations with broad spatial and temporal coverage collected across 106 sites representing nine different vegetation types in the permafrost region. We showed ecosystems with tall-statured shrubs and trees (>40 cm) have warmer shallow soils than those with short-statured tundra vegetation when normalized to a constant air temperature. In tree and tall shrub vegetation types, cooler temperatures in the warm season do not lead to cooler mean annual soil temperature indicating that ground thermal regimes in the cold-season rather than the warm-season are most critical for predicting soil warming in ecosystems underlain by permafrost. Our results suggest that the expansion of tall shrubs and trees into tundra regions can amplify shallow soil warming, and could increase the potential for increased seasonal thaw depth and increase soil carbon cycling rates and lead to increased carbon dioxide loss and further permafrost thaw.
2019
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Large loss of CO2 in winter observed across the northern permafrost region
Susan M. Natali,
Jennifer D. Watts,
Brendan M. Rogers,
Stefano Potter,
S. Ludwig,
A. K. Selbmann,
Patrick F. Sullivan,
Benjamin W. Abbott,
Kyle A. Arndt,
Leah Birch,
Mats Björkman,
A. Anthony Bloom,
Gerardo Celis,
Torben R. Christensen,
Casper T. Christiansen,
R. Commane,
Elisabeth J. Cooper,
Patrick Crill,
C. I. Czimczik,
S. P. Davydov,
Jinyang Du,
Jocelyn Egan,
Bo Elberling,
Eugénie Euskirchen,
Thomas Friborg,
Hélène Genet,
Mathias Göckede,
Jordan P. Goodrich,
Paul Grogan,
Manuel Helbig,
Elchin Jafarov,
Julie D. Jastrow,
Aram Kalhori,
Yongwon Kim,
J. S. Kimball,
Lars Kutzbach,
Mark J. Lara,
Klaus Steenberg Larsen,
Bang Yong Lee,
Zhihua Liu,
M. M. Loranty,
Magnus Lund,
Massimo Lupascu,
Nima Madani,
Avni Malhotra,
Roser Matamala,
J. W. Mcfarland,
A. David McGuire,
Anders Michelsen,
C. Minions,
Walter C. Oechel,
David Olefeldt,
Frans‐Jan W. Parmentier,
Norbert Pirk,
Benjamin Poulter,
William L. Quinton,
Fereidoun Rezanezhad,
David Risk,
Torsten Sachs,
Kevin Schaefer,
Niels Martin Schmidt,
Edward A. G. Schuur,
Philipp Semenchuk,
Gaius R. Shaver,
Oliver Sonnentag,
Gregory Starr,
Claire C. Treat,
Mark P. Waldrop,
Yihui Wang,
Jeffrey M. Welker,
Christian Wille,
Xiaofeng Xu,
Zhen Zhang,
Qianlai Zhuang,
Donatella Zona
Nature Climate Change, Volume 9, Issue 11
Recent warming in the Arctic, which has been amplified during the winter1-3, greatly enhances microbial decomposition of soil organic matter and subsequent release of carbon dioxide (CO2)4. However, the amount of CO2 released in winter is highly uncertain and has not been well represented by ecosystem models or by empirically-based estimates5,6. Here we synthesize regional in situ observations of CO2 flux from arctic and boreal soils to assess current and future winter carbon losses from the northern permafrost domain. We estimate a contemporary loss of 1662 Tg C yr-1 from the permafrost region during the winter season (October through April). This loss is greater than the average growing season carbon uptake for this region estimated from process models (-1032 Tg C yr-1). Extending model predictions to warmer conditions in 2100 indicates that winter CO2 emissions will increase 17% under a moderate mitigation scenario-Representative Concentration Pathway (RCP) 4.5-and 41% under business-as-usual emissions scenario-RCP 8.5. Our results provide a new baseline for winter CO2 emissions from northern terrestrial regions and indicate that enhanced soil CO2 loss due to winter warming may offset growing season carbon uptake under future climatic conditions.
2018
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Environmental and taxonomic controls of carbon and oxygen stable isotope composition in <i>Sphagnum</i> across broad climatic and geographic ranges
Gustaf Granath,
Håkan Rydin,
Jennifer L. Baltzer,
Fia Bengtsson,
Nicholas Boncek,
Luca Bragazza,
Zhao‐Jun Bu,
S. J. M. Caporn,
Ellen Dorrepaal,
О. В. Галанина,
Mariusz Gałka,
Anna Ganeva,
David P. Gillikin,
Irina Goia,
N. D. Goncharova,
Michal Hájek,
Akira Haraguchi,
Lorna I. Harris,
Elyn Humphreys,
Martin Jiroušek,
Katarzyna Kajukało,
Edgar Karofeld,
Natalia G. Koronatova,
Natalia P. Kosykh,
Mariusz Lamentowicz,
Е. Д. Лапшина,
Juul Limpens,
Maiju Linkosalmi,
Jinze Ma,
Marguerite Mauritz,
Tariq Muhammad Munir,
Susan M. Natali,
Rayna Natcheva,
Maria Noskova,
Richard J. Payne,
Kyle Pilkington,
Sean M. Robinson,
Bjorn J. M. Robroek,
Line Rochefort,
David Singer,
Hans K. Stenøien,
Eeva‐Stiina Tuittila,
Kai Vellak,
Anouk Verheyden,
J. M. Waddington,
Steven K. Rice
Abstract. Rain-fed peatlands are dominated by peat mosses (Sphagnum sp.), which for their growth depend on elements from the atmosphere. As the isotopic composition of carbon (12,13C) and oxygen (16,18O) of these Sphagnum mosses are affected by environmental conditions, the dead Sphagnum tissue accumulated in peat constitutes a potential long-term archive that can be used for climate reconstruction. However, there is a lack of adequate understanding of how isotope values are influenced by environmental conditions, which restricts their current use as environmental and palaeoenvironmental indicators. Here we tested (i) to what extent C and O isotopic variation in living tissue of Sphagnum is species-specific and associated with local hydrological gradients, climatic gradients (evapotranspiration, temperature, precipitation), and elevation; (ii) if the C isotopic signature can be a proxy for net primary productivity (NPP) of Sphagnum; and (iii) to what extent Sphagnum tissue δ18O tracks the δ18O isotope signature of precipitation. In total, we analysed 337 samples from 93 sites across North America and Eurasia using two important peat-forming Sphagnum species (S. magellanicum, S. fuscum) common to the Holartic realm. There were differences in δ13C values between species. For S. magellanicum δ13C decreased with increasing height above the water table (HWT, R2 = 17 %) and was positively correlated to productivity (R2 = 7 %). Together these two variables explained 46 % of the between-site variation in δ13C values. For S. fuscum, productivity was the only significant predictor of δ13C (total R2 = 6 %). For δ18O values, ca. 90 % of the variation was found between sites. Globally-modelled annual δ18O values in precipitation explained 69% of the between-site variation in tissue δ18O. S. magellanicum showed lower δ18O enrichment than S. fuscum (−0.83 ‰ lower) . Elevation and climatic variables were weak predictors of tissue δ18O values after controlling for δ18O values of the precipitation. To summarise, our study provides evidence for (a) good predictability of tissue δ18O values from modelled annual δ18O values in precipitation, and (b) the possibility to relate tissue δ13C values to HWT and NPP, but this appears to be species-dependent. These results suggest that isotope composition can be used at a large scale for climatic reconstructions but that such models should be species-specific.
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Reviews and syntheses: Changing ecosystem influences on soil thermal regimes in northern high-latitude permafrost regions
M. M. Loranty,
Benjamin W. Abbott,
Daan Blok,
Thomas A. Douglas,
Howard E. Epstein,
Bruce C. Forbes,
Benjamin M. Jones,
Alexander Kholodov,
Heather Kropp,
Avni Malhotra,
Steven D. Mamet,
Isla H. Myers‐Smith,
Susan M. Natali,
J. A. O’Donnell,
Gareth K. Phoenix,
A. V. Rocha,
Oliver Sonnentag,
Ken D. Tape,
Donald A. Walker
Biogeosciences, Volume 15, Issue 17
Abstract. Soils in Arctic and boreal ecosystems store twice as much carbon as the atmosphere, a portion of which may be released as high-latitude soils warm. Some of the uncertainty in the timing and magnitude of the permafrost–climate feedback stems from complex interactions between ecosystem properties and soil thermal dynamics. Terrestrial ecosystems fundamentally regulate the response of permafrost to climate change by influencing surface energy partitioning and the thermal properties of soil itself. Here we review how Arctic and boreal ecosystem processes influence thermal dynamics in permafrost soil and how these linkages may evolve in response to climate change. While many of the ecosystem characteristics and processes affecting soil thermal dynamics have been examined individually (e.g., vegetation, soil moisture, and soil structure), interactions among these processes are less understood. Changes in ecosystem type and vegetation characteristics will alter spatial patterns of interactions between climate and permafrost. In addition to shrub expansion, other vegetation responses to changes in climate and rapidly changing disturbance regimes will affect ecosystem surface energy partitioning in ways that are important for permafrost. Lastly, changes in vegetation and ecosystem distribution will lead to regional and global biophysical and biogeochemical climate feedbacks that may compound or offset local impacts on permafrost soils. Consequently, accurate prediction of the permafrost carbon climate feedback will require detailed understanding of changes in terrestrial ecosystem distribution and function, which depend on the net effects of multiple feedback processes operating across scales in space and time.