Improving estimates of the permafrost carbon-climate feedback with year-round measurements, inventories, and ecosystem manipulations

Rapid warming and changing precipitation patterns in northern regions are alleviating temperature and nutrient limitations on microbial activity in soils and jeopardizing the stability of vast amounts of ancient organic carbon (C) stored in near-surface permafrost. Like fossil fuels, permafrost C is...

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Main Author: Pedron, Shawn Alexander
Other Authors: Czimczik, Claudia I
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: eScholarship, University of California 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://escholarship.org/uc/item/3dj1c1n8
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spelling ftcdlib:oai:escholarship.org:ark:/13030/qt3dj1c1n8 2023-05-15T15:02:20+02:00 Improving estimates of the permafrost carbon-climate feedback with year-round measurements, inventories, and ecosystem manipulations Pedron, Shawn Alexander Czimczik, Claudia I 2021-01-01 application/pdf https://escholarship.org/uc/item/3dj1c1n8 en eng eScholarship, University of California qt3dj1c1n8 https://escholarship.org/uc/item/3dj1c1n8 CC-BY-NC-SA CC-BY-NC-SA Biogeochemistry carbon cycle permafrost radiocarbon soil respiration etd 2021 ftcdlib 2022-07-04T17:28:19Z Rapid warming and changing precipitation patterns in northern regions are alleviating temperature and nutrient limitations on microbial activity in soils and jeopardizing the stability of vast amounts of ancient organic carbon (C) stored in near-surface permafrost. Like fossil fuels, permafrost C is depleted in radiocarbon (14C) and its emission to the atmosphere contributes to climate change. While tundra systems continue to sequester C during the growing season, evidence is emerging that the non-growing season (fall through spring) is a critical period of microbial activity – turning the Arctic into a net C source.In my dissertation, I developed and deployed new technology to elucidate which C sources fuel microbial activity during the non-growing season and to quantify emissions of permafrost C. First, I present a new sampler for collecting depth-resolved, time-integrated soil-respired CO2 for 14C analysis from upland permafrost soils year-round. Second, I describe the first continuous, depth-resolved time series of microbial C emissions and annual flux-weighted signature of ecosystem-respired 14CO2 from graminoid tundra derived from year-round in situ measurements of soil 14CO2. Results show that soil microorganisms shift from using modern C during the growing season to increasingly older C pools in fall to winter. Third, I couple the sampler with bulk soil analyses, incubations, and soil thaw and land-atmosphere C flux observations to show that permafrost thaw, compaction and subsidence from 25 years of experimental snow augmentation has mobilized significant amounts of ancient C and profoundly impacted nitrogen cycling. These studies illustrate greater than expected seasonal dynamics in microbial C oxidation, further highlighting the role of the non-growing season for permafrost C emissions and paving the way for a regional-scale assessment of permafrost C emissions in the rapidly changing Arctic. Other/Unknown Material Arctic Climate change permafrost Tundra University of California: eScholarship Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection University of California: eScholarship
op_collection_id ftcdlib
language English
topic Biogeochemistry
carbon cycle
permafrost
radiocarbon
soil respiration
spellingShingle Biogeochemistry
carbon cycle
permafrost
radiocarbon
soil respiration
Pedron, Shawn Alexander
Improving estimates of the permafrost carbon-climate feedback with year-round measurements, inventories, and ecosystem manipulations
topic_facet Biogeochemistry
carbon cycle
permafrost
radiocarbon
soil respiration
description Rapid warming and changing precipitation patterns in northern regions are alleviating temperature and nutrient limitations on microbial activity in soils and jeopardizing the stability of vast amounts of ancient organic carbon (C) stored in near-surface permafrost. Like fossil fuels, permafrost C is depleted in radiocarbon (14C) and its emission to the atmosphere contributes to climate change. While tundra systems continue to sequester C during the growing season, evidence is emerging that the non-growing season (fall through spring) is a critical period of microbial activity – turning the Arctic into a net C source.In my dissertation, I developed and deployed new technology to elucidate which C sources fuel microbial activity during the non-growing season and to quantify emissions of permafrost C. First, I present a new sampler for collecting depth-resolved, time-integrated soil-respired CO2 for 14C analysis from upland permafrost soils year-round. Second, I describe the first continuous, depth-resolved time series of microbial C emissions and annual flux-weighted signature of ecosystem-respired 14CO2 from graminoid tundra derived from year-round in situ measurements of soil 14CO2. Results show that soil microorganisms shift from using modern C during the growing season to increasingly older C pools in fall to winter. Third, I couple the sampler with bulk soil analyses, incubations, and soil thaw and land-atmosphere C flux observations to show that permafrost thaw, compaction and subsidence from 25 years of experimental snow augmentation has mobilized significant amounts of ancient C and profoundly impacted nitrogen cycling. These studies illustrate greater than expected seasonal dynamics in microbial C oxidation, further highlighting the role of the non-growing season for permafrost C emissions and paving the way for a regional-scale assessment of permafrost C emissions in the rapidly changing Arctic.
author2 Czimczik, Claudia I
format Other/Unknown Material
author Pedron, Shawn Alexander
author_facet Pedron, Shawn Alexander
author_sort Pedron, Shawn Alexander
title Improving estimates of the permafrost carbon-climate feedback with year-round measurements, inventories, and ecosystem manipulations
title_short Improving estimates of the permafrost carbon-climate feedback with year-round measurements, inventories, and ecosystem manipulations
title_full Improving estimates of the permafrost carbon-climate feedback with year-round measurements, inventories, and ecosystem manipulations
title_fullStr Improving estimates of the permafrost carbon-climate feedback with year-round measurements, inventories, and ecosystem manipulations
title_full_unstemmed Improving estimates of the permafrost carbon-climate feedback with year-round measurements, inventories, and ecosystem manipulations
title_sort improving estimates of the permafrost carbon-climate feedback with year-round measurements, inventories, and ecosystem manipulations
publisher eScholarship, University of California
publishDate 2021
url https://escholarship.org/uc/item/3dj1c1n8
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Climate change
permafrost
Tundra
genre_facet Arctic
Climate change
permafrost
Tundra
op_relation qt3dj1c1n8
https://escholarship.org/uc/item/3dj1c1n8
op_rights CC-BY-NC-SA
op_rightsnorm CC-BY-NC-SA
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