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New Clues to Climate Change Found in Frozen Arctic Soil

by Rajashri on Oct 10 2008 5:14 PM

Frozen arctic soil contains nearly twice the greenhouse-gas-producing organic matter as was previously estimated, which reveals new clues to climate change, a new research has suggested.

For the research, School of Natural Resources and Agricultural Sciences professor Chien-Lu Ping and a team of scientists used jackhammers to dig down more than one meter into the permafrost to take soil samples from more than 100 sites throughout Alaska.

After analyzing the samples, the research team discovered a previously undocumented layer of organic matter on top of and in the upper part of permafrost, ranging from 60 to 120 centimeters deep.

This deep layer of organic matter first accumulates on the tundra surface and is buried during the churning freeze and thaw cycles that characterize the turbulent arctic landscape.

The resulting patterned ground plays a key role in the dynamics of carbon storage and release, Ping found.

When temperatures warm and the arctic soil churns, less carbon from the surface gets to the deeper part of the soil.

The carbon already stored in the deeper part of the soil is released into the atmosphere as carbon dioxide, methane and other gases.

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Ping predicted that a two- to three-degree rise in air temperatures could cause the arctic tundra to switch from a carbon sink - an area that absorbs more carbon dioxide than it produces - to a carbon source - an area that produces more carbon dioxide than it absorbs.

The more organic material stored in the tundra, the greater the potential effect of future releases, Ping stated.

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"The distribution of the Arctic carbon pool with regard to the surface, active layer and permafrost has not been evaluated before, but is very relevant in assessing changes that will occur across the Arctic system," said Ping.

"Where soil organic carbon is located in the soil profile is especially relevant and useful to climate warming assessments that need to evaluate effects on separate soil processes that vary with temperature and depth throughout the whole annual cycle of seasons," he added.

Source-ANI
RAS/SK


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