4.7 Article

Permafrost Landscape History Shapes Fluvial Chemistry, Ecosystem Carbon Balance, and Potential Trajectories of Future Change

Journal

GLOBAL BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES
Volume 36, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2022GB007403

Keywords

Arctic; biogeochemical fluxes; thermokarst; physiography

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada [430696, 444873]
  2. Campus Alberta Innovates Program
  3. Natural Resources Canada Polar Continental Shelf Program [617-16]
  4. Colleges and Institutes Canada (CICan
  5. Clean Tech Internship) [C6134]
  6. UAlberta Northern Research Award
  7. Arctic Institute of North America
  8. U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science
  9. U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Biological and Environmental Research [DE-AC02-06CH11357]
  10. JAMSTEC
  11. IARC/UAF
  12. ArCSII project [JPMXD1420318865]
  13. Academy of Finland project MUFFIN [332196]
  14. Academy of Finland (AKA) [332196, 332196] Funding Source: Academy of Finland (AKA)

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Intensifying permafrost thaw has significant impacts on carbon cycling, and determining the fate of carbon across diverse northern landscapes is crucial for constraining the trajectories of permafrost region ecosystem carbon balance.
Intensifying permafrost thaw alters carbon cycling by mobilizing large amounts of terrestrial substrate into aquatic ecosystems. Yet, few studies have measured aquatic carbon fluxes and constrained drivers of ecosystem carbon balance across heterogeneous Arctic landscapes. Here, we characterized hydrochemical and landscape controls on fluvial carbon cycling, quantified fluvial carbon fluxes, and estimated fluvial contributions to ecosystem carbon balance across 33 watersheds in four ecoregions in the continuous permafrost zone of the western Canadian Arctic: unglaciated uplands, ice-rich moraine, and organic-rich lowlands and till plains. Major ions, stable isotopes, and carbon speciation and fluxes revealed patterns in carbon cycling across ecoregions defined by terrain relief and accumulation of organics. In previously unglaciated mountainous watersheds, bicarbonate dominated carbon export (70% of total) due to chemical weathering of bedrock. In lowland watersheds, where soil organic carbon stores were largest, lateral transport of dissolved organic carbon (50%) and efflux of biotic CO2 (25%) dominated. In watersheds affected by thaw-induced mass wasting, erosion of ice-rich tills enhanced chemical weathering and increased particulate carbon fluxes by two orders of magnitude. From an ecosystem carbon balance perspective, fluvial carbon export in watersheds not affected by thaw-induced wasting was, on average, equivalent to 6%-16% of estimated net ecosystem exchange (NEE). In watersheds affected by thaw-induced wasting, fluvial carbon export approached 60% of NEE. Because future intensification of thermokarst activity will amplify fluvial carbon export, determining the fate of carbon across diverse northern landscapes is a priority for constraining trajectories of permafrost region ecosystem carbon balance.

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