A regime shift between soil moisture and temperature in the 1950s over the permafrost region of Northeast China

Abstract Permafrost is one of the essential carbon pools in the world. Due to limited studies on historical soil moisture changes and the coupling relationship between soil moisture and temperature in permafrost regions, significant uncertainty exists in the carbon loss in permafrost predicted by di...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Land Degradation & Development
Main Authors: Li, Qiang, Liu, Yu, Wang, Lu, Pang, Wenxuan, Zhang, Xuechen, Xu, Ling, Song, Huiming, Guo, Wei, Sun, Changfeng, Cai, Qiufang, Ren, Meng, Cheng, Hai
Other Authors: National Natural Science Foundation of China, Chinese Academy of Sciences
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ldr.5027
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/ldr.5027
Description
Summary:Abstract Permafrost is one of the essential carbon pools in the world. Due to limited studies on historical soil moisture changes and the coupling relationship between soil moisture and temperature in permafrost regions, significant uncertainty exists in the carbon loss in permafrost predicted by different models under global warming scenarios. Based on the tree‐ring width chronology of Pinus sylvestris var. mongholica Litv. growing in the southern edge of the Eurasian continuous permafrost zone, we reconstructed the summer (June–September) 0–1 m soil moisture variations from 1705 to 2009, which could explain 45.6% of the variance in the observed soil moisture. Overall, local precipitation and temperature exhibited statistically significant positive feedback ( p < 0.001) to soil moisture before the 1950s, indicating that the warm/humid climate pattern was conducive to soil moisture conservation before the Anthropocene Epoch. However, the effect of temperature on soil moisture has shifted suddenly to negative since the 1950s, implying that the positive soil moisture‐temperature relationship during the past three centuries has been disrupted by the unprecedented warming in the Modern Warm Period. Furthermore, we found that the temporal relationship of the soil moisture‐temperature (15‐year sliding correlation) in the study area is negatively regulated by the global mean temperature variations ( p < 0.01). The regime shift between soil moisture and temperature might be attributed to the superimposed influence of natural and anthropogenic factors since the 1950s. Although the warming leads to the melting of the permafrost layer, and thus the increase in soil moisture content, the enhanced evapotranspiration caused by warming up results in more water loss and drier soil. This study provides historical evidence of shifted soil moisture‐temperature coupling in the permafrost zone, warning that soil moisture in the permafrost region may further decline under global warming scenarios, thereby affecting vegetation ...