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A synthesis of thermokarst and thermo-erosion rates in northern permafrost regions

Authors :
Grosse, Guido
Sannel, A. B. K.
Abbott, Benjamin
Arp, Christopher
Camill, Philip
Farquharson, Louise M.
Günther, Frank
Hayes, D.J.
Jones, Benjamin M.
Jorgenson, T.
Kokelj, Steve
Kuhry, P.
Lenz, Josefine
Liu, Lin
McGuire, A. D.
Morgenstern, Anne
Nitze, Ingmar
O'Donnell, J.
Olefeldt, David
Parsekian, Andrew D.
Romanovsky, Vladimir
Schuur, E. A. G.
Turetsky, Merritt
Walter Anthony, K. M.
Wullschleger, S. D.
Grosse, Guido
Sannel, A. B. K.
Abbott, Benjamin
Arp, Christopher
Camill, Philip
Farquharson, Louise M.
Günther, Frank
Hayes, D.J.
Jones, Benjamin M.
Jorgenson, T.
Kokelj, Steve
Kuhry, P.
Lenz, Josefine
Liu, Lin
McGuire, A. D.
Morgenstern, Anne
Nitze, Ingmar
O'Donnell, J.
Olefeldt, David
Parsekian, Andrew D.
Romanovsky, Vladimir
Schuur, E. A. G.
Turetsky, Merritt
Walter Anthony, K. M.
Wullschleger, S. D.
Source :
EPIC3AGU Fall Meeting, San Francisco, USA, 2016-12-12-2016-12-16San Francisco, USA, AGU
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Permafrost regions have been identified to host a soil organic carbon (C) pool of global importance, storing more than 1500 PgC. A large portion of this C pool is currently frozen in deep soils and permafrost deposits. Permafrost thaw hence may result in mobilization of large amounts of C as greenhouse gases, dissolved organic C, or particulate organic matter, with substantial impacts on C cycling and C pool distribution. Understanding potential consequences and feedbacks of permafrost degradation therefore requires better quantification of processes and landforms related to thaw. While many predictive land surface models so far consider a gradual increase in the average active layer thickness across the permafrost domain, rapid shifts in landscape topography and surface hydrology caused by thaw of ice-rich permafrost are much more difficult to project. Field studies of thermokarst and thermo-erosion indicate highly complex and rapid landscape-ecosystem feedbacks. Contrary to top-down permafrost thaw that may affect any permafrost type at the surface, both thermokarst and thermo-erosion are considered pulse disturbances that are closely linked to presence of near-surface ice-rich permafrost, are active on short sub-annual to decadal time scales, and may affect C stores tens of meters deep. Here we present a comprehensive review synthesizing measured and modeled rates of thermokarst and thermo-erosion processes from the scientific literature and own observations across the northern Hemisphere permafrost regions. The goal of our synthesis is (1) to provide an overview on the range of thermokarst and thermo-erosion rates that may be used for parameterization of thermokarst and thermo-erosion in ecosystem and landscape models; and (2) to assess simple back-of-the-envelope scenarios of the magnitude of C thaw due to thermokarst and thermo-erosion versus projected active layer thickening. Example scenarios considering thermokarst lake expansion and talik growth indicate t

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
EPIC3AGU Fall Meeting, San Francisco, USA, 2016-12-12-2016-12-16San Francisco, USA, AGU
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.ocn970005717
Document Type :
Electronic Resource