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Minimal evidence of permafrost carbon in Siberia's Kolyma River

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New research finds that Arctic rivers currently transport limited permafrost-derived dissolved organic carbon, which has implications for understanding the region's changing carbon cycle—and its potential to accelerate climate change.

As rising temperatures across the Arctic thaw increasingly larger areas of permafrost, more and more stored within these frozen soils is being released. Because microbes can convert this liberated material into greenhouse gases that further accelerate the warming, its fate is of grave concern.

Despite general agreement that the warming climate is amplifying the in northern high-latitude watersheds, the amount of permafrost thawing into Arctic rivers is poorly constrained because of the lack of a reliable tracer. To help address this gap, Rogers et al. use a novel approach to search for old permafrost-derived in Russia's Kolyma River, whose 650,000-square-kilometer watershed is completely underlain by frozen soils.

The authors employed two independent techniques to chemically fingerprint thawed permafrost carbon and track it within the Kolyma watershed during late summer, when the most permafrost thaws. The results from both techniques point to the same conclusion: Relatively little old organic carbon is derived from thawing permafrost in the Kolyma River, which is dominated by modern inputs. Importantly, the team's analyses indicate this conclusion is true for both microbially unaltered and microbially degraded permafrost carbon.

Using a mixing model to further constrain their results, Rogers and colleagues estimated that a maximum of just 0.8% to 7.7% of the river's late summer dissolved organic carbon comes from undegraded permafrost. This amount translates to about 6% of the 0.82 teragram of the load the Kolyma delivers to the ocean each year.

This conclusion suggests that despite increased thawing, large northern high-latitude rivers are currently transporting only minor amounts of permafrost-derived dissolved organic carbon to the Arctic Ocean. These findings have important implications for understanding the evolution of dissolved organic carbon during thaw and river transport. More knowledge of where this thawed carbon resides and how it's affecting the Arctic's changing carbon cycle is necessary to improve assessments of the region's potential to accelerate global warming.

More information: Jennifer A. Rogers et al, Limited Presence of Permafrost Dissolved Organic Matter in the Kolyma River, Siberia Revealed by Ramped Oxidation, Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences (2021).

This story is republished courtesy of Eos, hosted by the American Geophysical Union. Read the original story .

Citation: Minimal evidence of permafrost carbon in Siberia's Kolyma River (2021, September 21) retrieved 29 April 2025 from /news/2021-09-minimal-evidence-permafrost-carbon-siberia.html
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