The effect of permafrost on time-split soil erosion using radionuclides (137Cs, 239 + 240Pu, meteoric 10Be) and stable isotopes ( δ 13C) in the eastern Swiss Alps

Purpose: Global warming is expected to change the thermal and hydrological soil regime in permafrost ecosystems which might impact soil erosion processes. Erosion assessment using radionuclides can provide information on past and ongoing, i.e. time-split, processes. The focus of this work was to fin...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Zollinger, Barbara, Alewell, Christine, Kneisel, Christof, Meusburger, Katrin, Brandová, Dagmar, Kubik, Peter, Schaller, Mirjam, Ketterer, Michael, Egli, Markus
Language:English
Published: 2021
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Online Access:http://doc.rero.ch/record/331402/files/11368_2014_Article_881.pdf
Description
Summary:Purpose: Global warming is expected to change the thermal and hydrological soil regime in permafrost ecosystems which might impact soil erosion processes. Erosion assessment using radionuclides can provide information on past and ongoing, i.e. time-split, processes. The focus of this work was to find out if permafrost soils in the Swiss Alps differ in their medium- and long-term erosion rates from non-permafrost soils and if rates have accelerated during the last few decades. Materials and methods: Using cosmogenic (meteoric 10Be) and anthropogenic radionuclides (137Cs, 239 + 240Pu), a time-split approach was achieved by determining erosion activities on the long (millennia; 10Be) and medium term (decades; 137Cs, 239 + 240Pu). Additionally, the stable isotope δ 13C signature in soil organic matter was used as a qualitative indicator for soil disturbance patterns. We compared soil erosion processes in permafrost soils and nearby unfrozen soils in the alpine (sites at 2,700m asl, alpine tundra) and the subalpine (sites 1,800m asl, natural forest) range of the Swiss Alps (Upper Engadine). 137Cs, 239 + 240Pu and δ 13C measurements were performed at the alpine sites only. Results and discussion: Depending on the calculation procedure (profile distribution model or inventory method), the 137Cs measurements revealed soil accumulation rates of 1-3t/km2/year in permafrost soils and 34-52t/km2/year in non-permafrost soils. However, due to snow cover and subsequent melt-water runoff during 137Cs deposition after the Chernobyl accident, caesium does not seem to be an appropriate soil erosion tracer on the investigated alpine sites. With 239 + 240Pu, more reliable results were achieved. 239 + 240Pu measurements provided erosion rates of 31-186t/km2/year in permafrost soils and accumulation rates of 87-218t/km2/year in non-permafrost soils. Erosion and accumulation were relatively low and related to the vegetation community. The long-term (10Be) soil redistribution rates (erosion rates up to 49t/km2/year and accumulation ...