4.6 Article

Sources of CO2 Produced in Freshly Thawed Pleistocene-Age Yedoma Permafrost

期刊

FRONTIERS IN EARTH SCIENCE
卷 9, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/feart.2021.737237

关键词

yedoma ice complex; permafost; carbon cycle; climat change; thermokarst; radiocarbon; greenhouse gas

资金

  1. German Ministry of Science and Education (BMBF) [03F0764A/E, 03F0834A/D, EXC2037/1]
  2. German Research Foundation (DFG) [EXC2037/1]

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The release of greenhouse gases from permafrost deposits in the circumarctic regions may accelerate global warming, and this feedback is controlled by the microbial degradability of the organic matter and the release of inorganic carbon. The study found that the CO2 released from thawed Yedoma is mainly from Pleistocene-age organic matter, with a smaller contribution from modern organic substrate and inorganic carbon. Younger organic substrates in the freshly thawed Yedoma were preferentially degraded, while the contribution of inorganic carbon increased during incubation. The results indicate the importance of considering both organic and inorganic carbon sources when estimating CO2 fluxes from thawed permafrost.
The release of greenhouse gases from the large organic carbon stock in permafrost deposits in the circumarctic regions may accelerate global warming upon thaw. The extent of this positive climate feedback is thought to be largely controlled by the microbial degradability of the organic matter preserved in these sediments. In addition, weathering and oxidation processes may release inorganic carbon preserved in permafrost sediments as CO2, which is generally not accounted for. We used C-13 and C-14 analysis and isotopic mass balances to differentiate and quantify organic and inorganic carbon released as CO2 in the field from an active retrogressive thaw slump of Pleistocene-age Yedoma and during a 1.5-years incubation experiment. The results reveal that the dominant source of the CO2 released from freshly thawed Yedoma exposed as thaw mound is Pleistocene-age organic matter (48-80%) and to a lesser extent modern organic substrate (3-34%). A significant portion of the CO2 originated from inorganic carbon in the Yedoma (17-26%). The mixing of young, active layer material with Yedoma at a site on the slump floor led to the preferential mineralization of this young organic carbon source. Admixtures of younger organic substrates in the Yedoma thaw mound were small and thus rapidly consumed as shown by lower contributions to the CO2 produced during few weeks of aerobic incubation at 4 degrees C corresponding to approximately one thaw season. Future CO2 fluxes from the freshly thawed Yedoma will contain higher proportions of ancient inorganic (22%) and organic carbon (61-78%) as suggested by the results at the end, after 1.5 years of incubation. The increasing contribution of inorganic carbon during the incubation is favored by the accumulation of organic acids from microbial organic matter degradation resulting in lower pH values and, in consequence, in inorganic carbon dissolution. Because part of the inorganic carbon pool is assumed to be of pedogenic origin, these emissions would ultimately not alter carbon budgets. The results of this study highlight the preferential degradation of younger organic substrates in freshly thawed Yedoma, if available, and a substantial release of CO2 from inorganic sources.

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