Rapid Ice‐Wedge Collapse and Permafrost Carbon Loss Triggered by Increased Snow Depth and Surface Runoff
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/33773Dato
2024-06-16Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Parmentier, Frans-Jan W.; Nilsen, Lennart; Tømmervik, Hans; Meisel, Ove H.; Bröder, Lisa; Vonk, Jorien E.; Westermann, Sebastian; Semenchuk, Phillip R.; Cooper, Elisabeth J.Sammendrag
Thicker snow cover in permafrost areas causes deeper active layers and thaw subsidence, which
alter local hydrology and may amplify the loss of soil carbon. However, the potential for changes in snow cover
and surface runoff to mobilize permafrost carbon remains poorly quantified. In this study, we show that a snow
fence experiment on High‐Arctic Svalbard inadvertently led to surface subsidence through warming, and
extensive downstream erosion due to increased surface runoff. Within a decade of artificially raised snow
depths, several ice wedges collapsed, forming a 50 m long and 1.5 m deep thermo‐erosion gully in the
landscape. We estimate that 1.1–3.3 tons C may have eroded, and that the gully is a hotspot for processing of
mobilized aquatic carbon. Our results show that interactions among snow, runoff and permafrost thaw form an
important driver of soil carbon loss, highlighting the need for improved model representation.
Snow cover is steadily disappearing as a result of climate change, but in
areas that remain below 0°C we can still expect an increase in snow depth in the middle of winter. Since snow
acts akin to a blanket, this warms the soil and accelerates the thaw of permafrost—thereby potentially
contributing to carbon release from these frozen soils. Ice wedges, which are typical for permafrost landscapes,
are particularly vulnerable to thaw because they hold a large amount of ice. When this ice melts, the surface
sinks down, and soil carbon may be lost. In this study, we show how experimentally raised snow cover triggered
the collapse of several ice wedges, not only through a warming effect of the snow but also due to an increase in
the flow of water through the ice wedge network. As a result, we estimate that 1.1–3.3 tons of carbon were
removed from this location, of which a portion could have entered the atmosphere as CO2. We emphasize the
importance of studying the interactions among snow, runoff, and permafrost thaw to better understand how this
may affect the release of greenhouse gases to the atmosphere.
Forlag
WileySitering
Parmentier F .J. W., Nilsen L, Tømmervik H, Meisel OH, Bröder L, Vonk JE, Westermann S, Semenchuk, Cooper E.J.. Rapid Ice‐Wedge Collapse and Permafrost Carbon Loss Triggered by Increased Snow Depth and Surface Runoff. Geophysical Research Letters. 2024Metadata
Vis full innførselSamlinger
Copyright 2024 The Author(s)