Abstract

Abstract. In Siberia and Alaska, permafrost thaw has been associated with significant increases in the delivery of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) to recipient stream ecosystems. Here, we examine the effect of retrogressive thaw slumps (RTSs) on DOC concentration and transport, using data from eight RTS features on the Peel Plateau, NWT, Canada. Like extensive regions of northwestern Canada, the Peel Plateau is comprised of thick, ice-rich tills that were deposited at the margins of the Laurentide Ice Sheet. RTS features are now widespread in this region, with headwall exposures up to 30 m high and total disturbed areas often exceeding 20 ha. We find that intensive slumping on the Peel Plateau is universally associated with decreasing DOC concentrations downstream of slumps, even though the composition of slump-derived dissolved organic matter (DOM; assessed using specific UV absorbance and slope ratios) is similar to permafrost-derived DOM from other regions. Comparisons of upstream and downstream DOC flux relative to fluxes of total suspended solids suggest that the substantial fine-grained sediments released by RTS features may sequester DOC. Runoff obtained directly from slump rill water, above entry into recipient streams, indicates that the deepest RTS features, which thaw the greatest extent of buried, Pleistocene-aged glacial tills, release low-concentration DOC when compared to paired upstream, undisturbed locations, while shallower features, with exposures that are more limited to a relict Holocene active layer, have within-slump DOC concentrations more similar to upstream sites. Finally, fine-scale work at a single RTS site indicates that temperature and precipitation serve as primary environmental controls on above-slump and below-slump DOC flux, but it also shows that the relationship between climatic parameters and DOC flux is complex for these dynamic thermokarst features. These results demonstrate that we should expect clear variation in thermokarst-associated DOC mobilization across Arctic regions. However, they also show that within-region variation in thermokarst intensity and landscape composition is critical for determining the biogeochemical response. Geological and climate legacy shape the physical and chemical composition of permafrost and thermokarst potential. As such, these factors must be considered in predictions of land-to-water carbon mobilization in a warming Arctic.

Highlights

  • Anthropogenic climate change is significantly affecting the Arctic cryosphere (IPCC, 2014)

  • We further investigated how short-term variation in precipitation, temperature, and solar radiation affect dissolved organic carbon (DOC) delivery from www.biogeosciences.net/14/5487/2017/

  • Comparisons of upstream and within-slump sites showed no consistent trend in DOC concentration, when evaluated across all slump locations (p = 0.153; Fig. 2; Table 2)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Anthropogenic climate change is significantly affecting the Arctic cryosphere (IPCC, 2014). Given that circumpolar stores of permafrost carbon are estimated to be almost double that of the atmospheric carbon pool (Hugelius et al, 2014), there is great potential for large increases in carbon mobilization as a result of permafrost thaw (Schuur et al, 2015) Within this context, the mobilization of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) from previously frozen soils is of particular interest because DOC acts as the primary substrate for the microbially mediated mineralization of organic carbon to carbon dioxide (Battin et al, 2008) and serves as the primary vehicle for the delivery of terrestrial carbon to the Arctic Ocean (Dittmar and Kattner, 2003; Holmes et al, 2012; Spencer et al, 2015). The implications of thaw-mediated DOC mobilization may range from effects on the permafrost-carbon feedback to the ecological and biogeochemical functioning of streams, rivers, and the nearshore

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call