4.5 Article

Ground warming and permafrost degradation in various terrestrial ecosystems in northcentral Mongolia

Journal

PERMAFROST AND PERIGLACIAL PROCESSES
Volume 33, Issue 4, Pages 406-424

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ppp.2161

Keywords

active layer thickness; ground warming; Mongolia; permafrost degradation; terrestrial ecosystems

Funding

  1. Ministry of Environment, Government of Japan
  2. National Natural Science Foundations of China [41961144021]

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The response of permafrost to climate change in different terrestrial ecosystems was studied by establishing a monitoring network in North-central Mongolia. The results showed that permafrost degradation was more pronounced in ice-rich areas and wetland ecosystems, while the steppe ecosystem experienced the most rapid permafrost degradation. Correlation analysis revealed the association between climatic factors and permafrost indicators, such as precipitation and soil water content with active layer thickness, and relative humidity with mean annual ground temperature.
To detect the response of permafrost to climate change in various terrestrial ecosystems, we established a permafrost monitoring network in 2007, which includes eight boreholes to monitor ground temperatures in forest, meadow, steppe, moderately dry steppe, and wetland ecosystems and three Automatic Weather Stations (AWS) to monitor climatic factors, such as wind speed (Ws), air temperature (Ta), relative humidity (RH), precipitation (P), solar radiation (Rs), net radiation (Rn), soil heat flux (SHF), soil temperature (Ts), and soil water content (SWC), in forest, meadow, and steppe ecosystems in north-central Mongolia. Major indicators, including mean annual ground temperature (MAGT), active layer thickness (ALT), and depth of zero annual amplitude (DZAA), were estimated to detect permafrost degradation. The results show that MAGT has increased by 0.00-0.02 degrees C per year (almost no change) in the ice-poor permafrost areas and by 0.03-0.06 degrees C per year in the ice-rich permafrost on pingos and wetlands. ALT showed an annual increase of -0.78 to 0.36 cm (almost no change) in the forest and meadow ecosystems and 2.3-7.2 cm in wetland ecosystems, whereas it increased by 23.0-28.9 cm per year in the steppe ecosystems over the last decade. This implies that the permafrost has degraded more rapidly in the steppe ecosystems than in other ecosystems. Based on correlation analysis, ALT is correlated to P in the meadow ecosystems and to SWC in the forest ecosystem, and MAGT is correlated to RH. However, both ALT and MAGT show a close correlation with major climatic factors, such as Ta, RH, SHF, and SWC in the steppe ecosystem. DZAA shows a close negative correlation with Ta in all ecosystems. These results provide evidence for permafrost degradation and its different responses to climate change in various terrestrial ecosystems.

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