Spatial variability of CO2 uptake in polygonal tundra: Assessing low-frequency disturbances in eddy covariance flux estimates
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/11773Dato
2017-06-29Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Pirk, Norbert; Sievers, Jakob; Mertes, Jordan; Parmentier, Frans-Jan; Mastepanov, Mikhail; Christensen, Torben RSammendrag
The large spatial variability in Arctic tundra complicates
the representative assessment of CO2 budgets. Accurate
measurements of these heterogeneous landscapes are,
however, essential to understanding their vulnerability to
climate change. We surveyed a polygonal tundra lowland
on Svalbard with an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) that
mapped ice-wedge morphology to complement eddy covariance
(EC) flux measurements of CO2. The analysis of spectral
distributions showed that conventional EC methods do
not accurately capture the turbulent CO2 exchange with a
spatially heterogeneous surface that typically features small
flux magnitudes. Nonlocal (low-frequency) flux contributions
were especially pronounced during snowmelt and introduced
a large bias of -46 gCm-2 to the annual CO2
budget in conventional methods (the minus sign indicates a
higher uptake by the ecosystem). Our improved flux calculations
with the ogive optimization method indicated that the
site was a strong sink for CO2 in 2015 (-82 gCm-2). Due
to differences in light-use efficiency, wetter areas with lowcentered
polygons sequestered 47% more CO2 than drier areas
with flat-centered polygons. While Svalbard has experienced
a strong increase in mean annual air temperature of
more than 2K in the last few decades, historical aerial photographs
from the site indicated stable ice-wedge morphology
over the last 7 decades. Apparently, warming has thus
far not been sufficient to initiate strong ice-wedge degradation,
possibly due to the absence of extreme heat episodes in
the maritime climate on Svalbard. However, in Arctic regions
where ice-wedge degradation has already initiated the associated
drying of landscapes, our results suggest a weakening
of the CO2 sink in polygonal tundra.
Beskrivelse
Source at https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-14-3157-2017