Rates and radiocarbon content of summer ecosystem respiration in response to long-term deeper snow in the High Arctic of NW Greenland

The amount and timing of snow cover control the cycling of carbon (C), water, and energy in arctic ecosystems. The implications of changing snow cover for regional C budgets, biogeochemistry, hydrology, and albedo due to climate change are rudimentary, especially for the High Arctic. In a polar semi...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences
Main Authors: Lupascu, M, Welker, JM, Xu, X, Czimczik, CI
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: eScholarship, University of California 2014
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Online Access:http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/42z6w12h
Description
Summary:The amount and timing of snow cover control the cycling of carbon (C), water, and energy in arctic ecosystems. The implications of changing snow cover for regional C budgets, biogeochemistry, hydrology, and albedo due to climate change are rudimentary, especially for the High Arctic. In a polar semidesert of NW Greenland, we used a ~10-year old snow manipulation experiment to quantify how deeper snow affects magnitude, seasonality, and14C content of summer C emissions. We monitored ecosystem respiration (Reco), soil CO2, and their14C contents over three summers in vegetated and bare areas. Additional snowpack, elevated soil water content (SWC), and temperature throughout the growing season in vegetated, but not in bare, areas. Daily Recowas positively correlated to temperature, but negatively correlated to SWC; consequently, we found no effect of increased snow on daily flux. Cumulative summertime Recowas not related to annual snowfall, but to water year precipitation (winter snow plus summer rain). Experimentally increased snowpack shortened the growing season length and reduced summertime Recoup to 40%. Soil CO2was older under increased snow. However, we found no effect of snow depth on the Recoage because older C emissions were masked by younger CO2produced from the litter layer or plant respiration. In the High Arctic, anticipated changes in precipitation regime associated with warming are a key uncertainty for understanding future C cycling. In polar semideserts, water year precipitation is an important driver of summertime Reco. Permafrost C is vulnerable to changes in snowpack, with a deeper snowpack-promoting decomposition of older soil C. ©2014. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved.