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Keywords = geospatial scaling of nutrient inventories

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19 pages, 2721 KB  
Article
Increased Arctic NO3 Availability as a Hydrogeomorphic Consequence of Permafrost Degradation and Landscape Drying
by Carli A. Arendt, Jeffrey M. Heikoop, Brent D. Newman, Cathy J. Wilson, Haruko Wainwright, Jitendra Kumar, Christian G. Andersen, Nathan A. Wales, Baptiste Dafflon, Jessica Cherry and Stan D. Wullschleger
Nitrogen 2022, 3(2), 314-332; https://doi.org/10.3390/nitrogen3020021 - 21 May 2022
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 3570
Abstract
Climate-driven permafrost thaw alters the strongly coupled carbon and nitrogen cycles within the Arctic tundra, influencing the availability of limiting nutrients including nitrate (NO3). Researchers have identified two primary mechanisms that increase nitrogen and NO3 availability within permafrost [...] Read more.
Climate-driven permafrost thaw alters the strongly coupled carbon and nitrogen cycles within the Arctic tundra, influencing the availability of limiting nutrients including nitrate (NO3). Researchers have identified two primary mechanisms that increase nitrogen and NO3 availability within permafrost soils: (1) the ‘frozen feast’, where previously frozen organic material becomes available as it thaws, and (2) ‘shrubification’, where expansion of nitrogen-fixing shrubs promotes increased soil nitrogen. Through the synthesis of original and previously published observational data, and the application of multiple geospatial approaches, this study investigates and highlights a third mechanism that increases NO3 availability: the hydrogeomorphic evolution of polygonal permafrost landscapes. Permafrost thaw drives changes in microtopography, increasing the drainage of topographic highs, thus increasing oxic conditions that promote NO3 production and accumulation. We extrapolate relationships between NO3 and soil moisture in elevated topographic features within our study area and the broader Alaskan Coastal Plain and investigate potential changes in NO3 availability in response to possible hydrogeomorphic evolution scenarios of permafrost landscapes. These approximations indicate that such changes could increase Arctic tundra NO3 availability by ~250–1000%. Thus, hydrogeomorphic changes that accompany continued permafrost degradation in polygonal permafrost landscapes will substantially increase soil pore water NO3 availability and boost future fertilization and productivity in the Arctic. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Nitrogen Cycling in Permafrost Soils)
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