Abstract

A range of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons has been identified, and regularities of their vertical distribution in the peatland of hummock-hollow complexes in the southern tundra – forest tundra and northern tundra – southern tundra ecotones of the European Arctic zone have been determined. Benzo[ghi]perylene, naphthalene, pyrene, fluorene, phenanthrene, benzo[b]fluoranthene and benzo[a]pyrene are displayed most in the peatlands under study. Regarding the peatland profile the vertical polyarene distribution is similar – in 150–175 cm permafrost layers (site 1) and 50(70)–210(250) cm layers (site 2), and on the border between the active layer and permafrost 35–50(60) cm (site 1) and 30(42) – 50 cm (site 2) a significant increase of HCO-accumulated PAHs weight fraction is observed. PAHs content maximums in tundra peatland horizons are associated both with 4-, 5- and 6-nuclear structures at both sites under the analysis, and with a larger amount of 2- and 3-nuclear polyarenes in the peatlands on the northern tundra-southern tundra ecotone. Aeration-exposed seasonally thawing peatland layers are subject to continuous formation of primarily light 2- and 3-nuclear PAHs of natural origin resulting from microbiological decomposition of plant residues, which are subsequently involved in equilibrium cycles of chemical and biochemical transformation, with their total capacity remaining almost unchanged and constituting ⁓200–500 ng/g. Owing to low productivity of plant communities and absence of tree vegetation in the seasonally thawed layer, accumulation of the sum of 4-, 5- and 6-nuclear PAHs weakens significantly. One can detect dependencies between individual PAHs and the botanic composition of peat through higher weight fraction of 4-, 5- and 6-nuclear polyarenes being lignin transformation products generated more as the share of tree vegetation grows. The PAHs composition is a paleoclimatic marker reflecting adequately both changing paleovegetation stages and the degree of peat decomposition.

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