Publication | Open Access
High biolability of ancient permafrost carbon upon thaw
334
Citations
28
References
2013
Year
Organic GeochemistryCarbon SequestrationBiogeochemistryPermafrostHigh BiolabilityEngineeringBiological Carbon FixationPaleoenvironmental ChangeOldest DocCryosphereBiolabile DocPeriglacial ProcessPaleoecologyYedoma Stream DocWater EcologySedimentologyEarth Science
Abstract Ongoing climate warming in the Arctic will thaw permafrost and remobilize substantial terrestrial organic carbon (OC) pools. Around a quarter of northern permafrost OC resides in Siberian Yedoma deposits, the oldest form of permafrost carbon. However, our understanding of the degradation and fate of this ancient OC in coastal and fluvial environments still remains rudimentary. Here, we show that ancient dissolved OC (DOC, >21,000 14 C years), the oldest DOC ever reported, is mobilized in stream waters draining Yedoma outcrops. Furthermore, this DOC is highly biolabile: 34 ± 0.8% was lost during a 14 day incubation under dark, oxygenated conditions at ambient river temperatures. Mixtures of Yedoma stream DOC with mainstem river and ocean waters, mimicking in situ mixing processes, also showed high DOC losses (14 days; 17 ± 0.8% to 33 ± 1.0%). This suggests that this exceptionally old DOC is among the most biolabile DOC in any previously reported contemporary river or stream in the Arctic.
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