Increased Arctic NO3− Availability as a Hydrogeomorphic Consequence of Permafrost Degradation and Landscape Drying

Climate-driven permafrost thaw alters the strongly coupled carbon and nitrogen cycles within the Arctic tundra, influencing the availability of limiting nutrients including nitrate (NO 3 − ). Researchers have identified two primary mechanisms that increase nitrogen and NO 3 − availability within per...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Nitrogen
Main Authors: Arendt, Carli A., Heikoop, Jeffrey M., Newman, Brent D., Wilson, Cathy J., Wainwright, Haruko, Kumar, Jitendra, Andersen, Christian G., Wales, Nathan A., Dafflon, Baptiste, Cherry, Jessica, Wullschleger, Stan D.
Other Authors: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Nuclear Science and Engineering
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/142798.2
Description
Summary:Climate-driven permafrost thaw alters the strongly coupled carbon and nitrogen cycles within the Arctic tundra, influencing the availability of limiting nutrients including nitrate (NO 3 − ). Researchers have identified two primary mechanisms that increase nitrogen and NO 3 − availability within permafrost soils: (1) the ‘frozen feast’, where previously frozen organic material becomes available as it thaws, and (2) ‘shrubification’, where expansion of nitrogen-fixing shrubs promotes increased soil nitrogen. Through the synthesis of original and previously published observational data, and the application of multiple geospatial approaches, this study investigates and highlights a third mechanism that increases NO 3 − availability: the hydrogeomorphic evolution of polygonal permafrost landscapes. Permafrost thaw drives changes in microtopography, increasing the drainage of topographic highs, thus increasing oxic conditions that promote NO 3 − production and accumulation. We extrapolate relationships between NO 3 − and soil moisture in elevated topographic features within our study area and the broader Alaskan Coastal Plain and investigate potential changes in NO 3 − availability in response to possible hydrogeomorphic evolution scenarios of permafrost landscapes. These approximations indicate that such changes could increase Arctic tundra NO 3 − availability by ~250–1000%. Thus, hydrogeomorphic changes that accompany continued permafrost degradation in polygonal permafrost landscapes will substantially increase soil pore water NO 3 − availability and boost future fertilization and productivity in the Arctic.