Xuan Xi

and 3 more

Lei Liu

and 5 more

Effects of permafrost degradation on carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) cycling on the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau (QTP) have rarely been analyzed. This study used a revised process-based biogeochemical model to quantify the effects in the region during the 21st century. We found that permafrost degradation would expose 0.98±0.49 (mean±SD) and 2.17±0.38 Pg C of soil organic carbon under the representative concentration pathway (RCP) 4.5 and the RCP 8.5, respectively. Among them about 60% will be decomposed, enhancing heterotrophic respiration by 9.54±5.20 (RCP 4.5) and 38.72±17.49 (RCP 8.5) Tg C/yr in 2099. Deep soil N supply due to thawing permafrost is not accessible to plants, providing limited benefits to plant growth and only stimulating net primary production by 6.95±5.28 (RCP 4.5) and 27.97±12.82 (RCP 8.5) Tg C/yr in 2099. As a result, permafrost degradation would weaken the regional C sink (net ecosystem production) by 303.55±254.80 (RCP 4.5) and 518.43±234.04 (RCP 8.5) Tg C cumulatively during 2020–2099. Permafrost degradation has a higher influence on C balance of alpine meadow than alpine steppe ecosystems on the QTP. The shallower active layer, higher soil C and N stocks, and wetter environment in alpine meadow are responsible for its stronger response of C balance to permafrost thaw. This study highlights that permafrost degradation could continue to release large amounts of C to the atmosphere irrespective of potentially more nitrogen available from deep soils.

Bailu Zhao

and 2 more

Northern peatlands are a large C stock and often act as a C sink, but are susceptible to climate warming. To understand the role of peatlands in the global carbon-climate feedback, it is necessary to accurately quantify their C stock changes and decomposition. In this study, a process-based model, the Peatland Terrestrial Ecosystem Model, is used to simulate pan-Arctic peatland C dynamics from 15ka BP to 1990. To improve the accuracy of the simulation, spatially-explicit water run-on and runoff processes were considered, four different pan-Arctic peatland distribution datasets were used, and a spatially-explicit peat basal date dataset was developed using a neural network approach. The model was calibrated against 2055 peat thickness observations and the parameters were interpolated to the pan-Arctic region. Using the model, we estimate that, in 1990, the pan-Arctic peatlands soil C stock is 396-421 Pg C, and the Holocene average C accumulation rate was 22.9 g C•m-2 yr-1. Our estimated peat permafrost development history generally agrees with multi-proxy-based paleo-climate datasets and core-derived permafrost areal dynamics. During 500 BP to 1990, the pan-Arctic region went through the Little Ice Age and Anthropocene warming. Under Anthropocene warming, in the freeze-thaw and permafrost-free regions, the peat C accumulation rate decreased, but it increased in permafrost regions. Our study suggests that if current permafrost regions switch to permafrost-free conditions in a warming future, the peat C accumulation rate of the entire pan-Arctic region will decrease, but the sink and source activities of these peatlands are still uncertain. permafrost. Under Anthropocene warming, in the freeze-thaw and permafrost-free regions, the peat C accumulation rate decreased, but it increased in permafrost regions. This result suggests if permafrost regions switch to permafrost-free conditions, the peat C accumulation rate of the entire pan-Arctic region will decrease.