Subsurface Controls on Carbon Dynamics in a Changing Arctic Ecosystem

With climate change in the Arctic, temperatures are expected to rise at twice the rate as in temperate latitudes. This rapid change has the potential to disrupt local ecosystems and feed back to the global climate as frozen soils thaw and warm. Large stocks of carbon have accumulated in Arctic soils...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Vaughn, Lydia Smith
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: eScholarship, University of California 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/2xb2v97t
id ftcdlib:qt2xb2v97t
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection University of California: eScholarship
op_collection_id ftcdlib
language English
topic Biogeochemistry
Climate change
Arctic
Carbon cycle
Carbon dynamics
Radiocarbon
Stable isotopes
spellingShingle Biogeochemistry
Climate change
Arctic
Carbon cycle
Carbon dynamics
Radiocarbon
Stable isotopes
Vaughn, Lydia Smith
Subsurface Controls on Carbon Dynamics in a Changing Arctic Ecosystem
topic_facet Biogeochemistry
Climate change
Arctic
Carbon cycle
Carbon dynamics
Radiocarbon
Stable isotopes
description With climate change in the Arctic, temperatures are expected to rise at twice the rate as in temperate latitudes. This rapid change has the potential to disrupt local ecosystems and feed back to the global climate as frozen soils thaw and warm. Large stocks of carbon have accumulated in Arctic soils, protected from decomposition by cold, wet, and frozen conditions. With warming and thawing due to climate change, decomposition of this carbon is expected to increase, releasing it to the atmosphere as the greenhouse gases CO2 and methane. While a number of modeling efforts have attempted to quantify this potential feedback, the future Arctic carbon balance remains unknown due to uncertain mechanisms stabilizing soil carbon and complex interactions between vegetation and soils. In studies based in Barrow, Alaska, I address three sources of this uncertainty: (1) the magnitude of methane emissions following soil thaw, (2) interactions between plants, soil carbon, and microbial decomposers, and (3) the sensitivity of soil carbon cycling changes in microclimate. First, I ask how methane formation, consumption within the soil, and net emission to the atmosphere may change with soil thaw in the Arctic. Loss of permafrost (perennially frozen ground) can lead to large-scale landscape changes, redistributing water and soil. Such physical changes can strongly influence emissions of methane, a greenhouse gas roughly 25 times as potent as CO2, whose future emission rates are highly uncertain. Combining field measurements with statistical modeling, I assess soil methane emissions and microbial methane processes (production and consumption) across a gradient of permafrost thaw. In contrast with many previous studies, I find that more degraded sites have lower methane emissions, a different primary methanogenic pathway, and greater methane oxidation than intact permafrost sites. These differences are greater than soil moisture or temperature data can explain. Additional microtopographic controls accounting for these observations may include differences in water flow and vegetation between intact and degraded polygons.Second, I ask how changes in plant activity due to climate change may influence the rate of soil carbon decomposition (the priming effect), through interactions between plant roots, microbial decomposers, and soil carbon compounds. In a two-year field experiment, I simulate increased plant root activity and measure its influence on soil carbon decomposition, plant CO2 uptake, mineral nitrogen availability, and microbial communities. I find no measurable relationship between substrate additions and soil organic matter decomposition, nutrient supply, or microbial population size. Treatment-level differences in primary production, however, indicate possible longer-term interactions between vegetation and decomposition. The absence of a measurable priming effect contrasts with numerous published reports documenting a positive priming effect under tightly controlled conditions. This difference may be due to high background variability in ecosystem respiration, a property of this in situ experiment. This chapter is one of the first studies evaluating this plant-soil interaction in a field experimental context, with a representative degree of environmental variability.Third, I ask how decomposition rates of fast-cycling and slow-cycling soil carbon may be influenced by microclimatic changes. The rate of soil carbon turnover and its sensitivity to environmental variables such as temperature and oxygen availability are both highly uncertain and highly influential for model predictions of the global carbon cycle. In two laboratory incubations, I use natural abundance radiocarbon measurements of CO2 and soil organic matter to determine how fast-cycling and slow-cycling carbon pools respond to temperature changes and transitions between anaerobic and aerobic conditions. Using a novel analytical approach, I find that fast- and slow-cycling carbon pools from these Barrow, Alaska soils have comparable temperature sensitivities, with decomposition from both pools increasing by ~40 % for a 5°C temperature increase. Similarly, decomposition rates were highly sensitive to aerobic vs. anaerobic conditions, with no significant difference in sensitivity between pools. Radiocarbon contents of CO2 and soil organic matter indicate that ancient, slow-cycling carbon is sensitive to decomposition under soil temperature increases and water table changes.
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Vaughn, Lydia Smith
author_facet Vaughn, Lydia Smith
author_sort Vaughn, Lydia Smith
title Subsurface Controls on Carbon Dynamics in a Changing Arctic Ecosystem
title_short Subsurface Controls on Carbon Dynamics in a Changing Arctic Ecosystem
title_full Subsurface Controls on Carbon Dynamics in a Changing Arctic Ecosystem
title_fullStr Subsurface Controls on Carbon Dynamics in a Changing Arctic Ecosystem
title_full_unstemmed Subsurface Controls on Carbon Dynamics in a Changing Arctic Ecosystem
title_sort subsurface controls on carbon dynamics in a changing arctic ecosystem
publisher eScholarship, University of California
publishDate 2017
url http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/2xb2v97t
op_coverage 157
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Arctic
Barrow
Climate change
permafrost
Alaska
genre_facet Arctic
Arctic
Barrow
Climate change
permafrost
Alaska
op_source Vaughn, Lydia Smith. (2017). Subsurface Controls on Carbon Dynamics in a Changing Arctic Ecosystem. UC Berkeley: Energy & Resources. Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/2xb2v97t
op_relation http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/2xb2v97t
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spelling ftcdlib:qt2xb2v97t 2023-05-15T14:23:34+02:00 Subsurface Controls on Carbon Dynamics in a Changing Arctic Ecosystem Vaughn, Lydia Smith 157 2017-01-01 application/pdf http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/2xb2v97t en eng eScholarship, University of California http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/2xb2v97t qt2xb2v97t public Vaughn, Lydia Smith. (2017). Subsurface Controls on Carbon Dynamics in a Changing Arctic Ecosystem. UC Berkeley: Energy & Resources. Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/2xb2v97t Biogeochemistry Climate change Arctic Carbon cycle Carbon dynamics Radiocarbon Stable isotopes dissertation 2017 ftcdlib 2018-01-19T23:51:33Z With climate change in the Arctic, temperatures are expected to rise at twice the rate as in temperate latitudes. This rapid change has the potential to disrupt local ecosystems and feed back to the global climate as frozen soils thaw and warm. Large stocks of carbon have accumulated in Arctic soils, protected from decomposition by cold, wet, and frozen conditions. With warming and thawing due to climate change, decomposition of this carbon is expected to increase, releasing it to the atmosphere as the greenhouse gases CO2 and methane. While a number of modeling efforts have attempted to quantify this potential feedback, the future Arctic carbon balance remains unknown due to uncertain mechanisms stabilizing soil carbon and complex interactions between vegetation and soils. In studies based in Barrow, Alaska, I address three sources of this uncertainty: (1) the magnitude of methane emissions following soil thaw, (2) interactions between plants, soil carbon, and microbial decomposers, and (3) the sensitivity of soil carbon cycling changes in microclimate. First, I ask how methane formation, consumption within the soil, and net emission to the atmosphere may change with soil thaw in the Arctic. Loss of permafrost (perennially frozen ground) can lead to large-scale landscape changes, redistributing water and soil. Such physical changes can strongly influence emissions of methane, a greenhouse gas roughly 25 times as potent as CO2, whose future emission rates are highly uncertain. Combining field measurements with statistical modeling, I assess soil methane emissions and microbial methane processes (production and consumption) across a gradient of permafrost thaw. In contrast with many previous studies, I find that more degraded sites have lower methane emissions, a different primary methanogenic pathway, and greater methane oxidation than intact permafrost sites. These differences are greater than soil moisture or temperature data can explain. Additional microtopographic controls accounting for these observations may include differences in water flow and vegetation between intact and degraded polygons.Second, I ask how changes in plant activity due to climate change may influence the rate of soil carbon decomposition (the priming effect), through interactions between plant roots, microbial decomposers, and soil carbon compounds. In a two-year field experiment, I simulate increased plant root activity and measure its influence on soil carbon decomposition, plant CO2 uptake, mineral nitrogen availability, and microbial communities. I find no measurable relationship between substrate additions and soil organic matter decomposition, nutrient supply, or microbial population size. Treatment-level differences in primary production, however, indicate possible longer-term interactions between vegetation and decomposition. The absence of a measurable priming effect contrasts with numerous published reports documenting a positive priming effect under tightly controlled conditions. This difference may be due to high background variability in ecosystem respiration, a property of this in situ experiment. This chapter is one of the first studies evaluating this plant-soil interaction in a field experimental context, with a representative degree of environmental variability.Third, I ask how decomposition rates of fast-cycling and slow-cycling soil carbon may be influenced by microclimatic changes. The rate of soil carbon turnover and its sensitivity to environmental variables such as temperature and oxygen availability are both highly uncertain and highly influential for model predictions of the global carbon cycle. In two laboratory incubations, I use natural abundance radiocarbon measurements of CO2 and soil organic matter to determine how fast-cycling and slow-cycling carbon pools respond to temperature changes and transitions between anaerobic and aerobic conditions. Using a novel analytical approach, I find that fast- and slow-cycling carbon pools from these Barrow, Alaska soils have comparable temperature sensitivities, with decomposition from both pools increasing by ~40 % for a 5°C temperature increase. Similarly, decomposition rates were highly sensitive to aerobic vs. anaerobic conditions, with no significant difference in sensitivity between pools. Radiocarbon contents of CO2 and soil organic matter indicate that ancient, slow-cycling carbon is sensitive to decomposition under soil temperature increases and water table changes. Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Arctic Arctic Barrow Climate change permafrost Alaska University of California: eScholarship Arctic