Year-round soil pore space carbon dioxide and temperature at Toolik Field Station, AK (2017-2018)

This data set reports the concentration of carbon dioxide and soil temperature in a permafrost soil under moist acidic tussock tundra near Toolik Field Station. This data was collected in support of a project that aims to understand the sources of carbon dioxide emitted from Arctic tundra year-round...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Claudia Czimczik, Shawn Pedron, Eric Klein, Jeffrey Welker
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Arctic Data Center 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://search.dataone.org/view/urn:uuid:acbd394c-7944-4f69-adf4-66eeca6d0e8c
id dataone:urn:uuid:acbd394c-7944-4f69-adf4-66eeca6d0e8c
record_format openpolar
spelling dataone:urn:uuid:acbd394c-7944-4f69-adf4-66eeca6d0e8c 2024-06-03T18:46:36+00:00 Year-round soil pore space carbon dioxide and temperature at Toolik Field Station, AK (2017-2018) Claudia Czimczik Shawn Pedron Eric Klein Jeffrey Welker Toolik Field Station, AK, USA ENVELOPE(-149.60289,-149.60289,68.62551,68.62551) BEGINDATE: 2017-06-09T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2018-09-20T00:00:00Z 2018-01-01T00:00:00Z https://search.dataone.org/view/urn:uuid:acbd394c-7944-4f69-adf4-66eeca6d0e8c unknown Arctic Data Center CARBON DIOXIDE SOIL GAS/AIR SOIL TEMPERATURE ACTIVE LAYER Dataset 2018 dataone:urn:node:ARCTIC 2024-06-03T18:11:42Z This data set reports the concentration of carbon dioxide and soil temperature in a permafrost soil under moist acidic tussock tundra near Toolik Field Station. This data was collected in support of a project that aims to understand the sources of carbon dioxide emitted from Arctic tundra year-round. Carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas produced in soils by the respiration of roots and of microorganisms decomposing soil organic matter, and both processes are sensitive to changes in temperature and water content. Increases in carbon dioxide emissions can be related to increased plant productivity (photosynthesis and storage of carbon in plants and soils) or increased microbial activity (loss of carbon previously stored in soils). However, measuring the radiocarbon content (age) of carbon dioxide emissions can be used to understand how Arctic ecosystems are responding to climate change, because roots and microorganisms respire carbon with distinct isotopic signatures. In this project, our team built and deployed new technology to characterize the sources of carbon emissions from Arctic tundra year-round, with a special focus on winter emissions. Specifically, we developed a sampling system that continuously collects carbon dioxide over a period of 1-4 weeks. The system is passive (no power requirements, ambient pressure and temperature), rugged (suitable for well-aerated, waterlogged, and frozen soils), light-weight (<0.5 kg/sample), and isotopically-clean (i.e. the recovered carbon dioxide is suitable for radiocarbon analysis and the sampler itself does not emit carbon). The samples are shipped to the W. M. Keck Carbon Cycle Accelerator Mass Spectrometer facility at the University of California, Irvine, where they are analyzed for their radiocarbon content. Their isotopic information allows us to elucidate which soil carbon pools are being consumed by microorganism during the winter, and to quantify what proportion of the carbon originates from microorganisms decomposing organic matter (as opposed to from the roots of plants that are fixing carbon from the atmosphere) during the summer. Dataset Arctic Climate change permafrost Tundra Arctic Data Center (via DataONE) Arctic ENVELOPE(-149.60289,-149.60289,68.62551,68.62551)
institution Open Polar
collection Arctic Data Center (via DataONE)
op_collection_id dataone:urn:node:ARCTIC
language unknown
topic CARBON DIOXIDE
SOIL GAS/AIR
SOIL TEMPERATURE
ACTIVE LAYER
spellingShingle CARBON DIOXIDE
SOIL GAS/AIR
SOIL TEMPERATURE
ACTIVE LAYER
Claudia Czimczik
Shawn Pedron
Eric Klein
Jeffrey Welker
Year-round soil pore space carbon dioxide and temperature at Toolik Field Station, AK (2017-2018)
topic_facet CARBON DIOXIDE
SOIL GAS/AIR
SOIL TEMPERATURE
ACTIVE LAYER
description This data set reports the concentration of carbon dioxide and soil temperature in a permafrost soil under moist acidic tussock tundra near Toolik Field Station. This data was collected in support of a project that aims to understand the sources of carbon dioxide emitted from Arctic tundra year-round. Carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas produced in soils by the respiration of roots and of microorganisms decomposing soil organic matter, and both processes are sensitive to changes in temperature and water content. Increases in carbon dioxide emissions can be related to increased plant productivity (photosynthesis and storage of carbon in plants and soils) or increased microbial activity (loss of carbon previously stored in soils). However, measuring the radiocarbon content (age) of carbon dioxide emissions can be used to understand how Arctic ecosystems are responding to climate change, because roots and microorganisms respire carbon with distinct isotopic signatures. In this project, our team built and deployed new technology to characterize the sources of carbon emissions from Arctic tundra year-round, with a special focus on winter emissions. Specifically, we developed a sampling system that continuously collects carbon dioxide over a period of 1-4 weeks. The system is passive (no power requirements, ambient pressure and temperature), rugged (suitable for well-aerated, waterlogged, and frozen soils), light-weight (<0.5 kg/sample), and isotopically-clean (i.e. the recovered carbon dioxide is suitable for radiocarbon analysis and the sampler itself does not emit carbon). The samples are shipped to the W. M. Keck Carbon Cycle Accelerator Mass Spectrometer facility at the University of California, Irvine, where they are analyzed for their radiocarbon content. Their isotopic information allows us to elucidate which soil carbon pools are being consumed by microorganism during the winter, and to quantify what proportion of the carbon originates from microorganisms decomposing organic matter (as opposed to from the roots of plants that are fixing carbon from the atmosphere) during the summer.
format Dataset
author Claudia Czimczik
Shawn Pedron
Eric Klein
Jeffrey Welker
author_facet Claudia Czimczik
Shawn Pedron
Eric Klein
Jeffrey Welker
author_sort Claudia Czimczik
title Year-round soil pore space carbon dioxide and temperature at Toolik Field Station, AK (2017-2018)
title_short Year-round soil pore space carbon dioxide and temperature at Toolik Field Station, AK (2017-2018)
title_full Year-round soil pore space carbon dioxide and temperature at Toolik Field Station, AK (2017-2018)
title_fullStr Year-round soil pore space carbon dioxide and temperature at Toolik Field Station, AK (2017-2018)
title_full_unstemmed Year-round soil pore space carbon dioxide and temperature at Toolik Field Station, AK (2017-2018)
title_sort year-round soil pore space carbon dioxide and temperature at toolik field station, ak (2017-2018)
publisher Arctic Data Center
publishDate 2018
url https://search.dataone.org/view/urn:uuid:acbd394c-7944-4f69-adf4-66eeca6d0e8c
op_coverage Toolik Field Station, AK, USA
ENVELOPE(-149.60289,-149.60289,68.62551,68.62551)
BEGINDATE: 2017-06-09T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2018-09-20T00:00:00Z
long_lat ENVELOPE(-149.60289,-149.60289,68.62551,68.62551)
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Climate change
permafrost
Tundra
genre_facet Arctic
Climate change
permafrost
Tundra
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