Storage and transformation of organic matter fractions in cryoturbated permafrost soils across the Siberian Arctic

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Gentsch, N.; Mikutta, R.; Alves, R.J.E.; Barta, J.; Čapek, P.; Gittel, A. et al.: Storage and transformation of organic matter fractions in cryoturbated permafrost soils across the Siberian Arctic. In: Biogeosciences 12 (2015), S. 4525-4542. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/bg-12-4525-2015

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Abstract: 
In permafrost soils, the temperature regime and the resulting cryogenic processes are important determinants of the storage of organic carbon (OC) and its small-scale spatial variability. For cryoturbated soils, there is a lack of research assessing pedon-scale heterogeneity in OC stocks and the transformation of functionally different organic matter (OM) fractions, such as particulate and mineral-associated OM. Therefore, pedons of 28 Turbels were sampled in 5 m wide soil trenches across the Siberian Arctic to calculate OC and total nitrogen (TN) stocks based on digital profile mapping. Density fractionation of soil samples was performed to distinguish between particulate OM (light fraction, LF, < 1.6 g cm−3), mineral associated OM (heavy fraction, HF, > 1.6 g cm−3), and a mobilizable dissolved pool (mobilizable fraction, MoF). Across all investigated soil profiles, the total OC storage was 20.2 ± 8.0 kg m−2 (mean ± SD) to 100 cm soil depth. Fifty-four percent of this OC was located in the horizons of the active layer (annual summer thawing layer), showing evidence of cryoturbation, and another 35 % was present in the upper permafrost. The HF-OC dominated the overall OC stocks (55 %), followed by LF-OC (19 % in mineral and 13 % in organic horizons). During fractionation, approximately 13 % of the OC was released as MoF, which likely represents a readily bioavailable OM pool. Cryogenic activity in combination with cold and wet conditions was the principle mechanism through which large OC stocks were sequestered in the subsoil (16.4 ± 8.1 kg m−2; all mineral B, C, and permafrost horizons). Approximately 22 % of the subsoil OC stock can be attributed to LF material subducted by cryoturbation, whereas migration of soluble OM along freezing gradients appeared to be the principle source of the dominant HF (63 %) in the subsoil. Despite the unfavourable abiotic conditions, low C / N ratios and high δ13C values indicated substantial microbial OM transformation in the subsoil, but this was not reflected in altered LF and HF pool sizes. Partial least-squares regression analyses suggest that OC accumulates in the HF fraction due to co-precipitation with multivalent cations (Al, Fe) and association with poorly crystalline iron oxides and clay minerals. Our data show that, across all permafrost pedons, the mineral-associated OM represents the dominant OM fraction, suggesting that the HF-OC is the OM pool in permafrost soils on which changing soil conditions will have the largest impact.
License of this version: CC BY 3.0 Unported
Document Type: Article
Publishing status: publishedVersion
Issue Date: 2015
Appears in Collections:Naturwissenschaftliche Fakultät

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1 image of flag of Germany Germany 651 60.61%
2 image of flag of United States United States 107 9.96%
3 image of flag of China China 61 5.68%
4 image of flag of Russian Federation Russian Federation 30 2.79%
5 image of flag of France France 22 2.05%
6 image of flag of Korea, Republic of Korea, Republic of 17 1.58%
7 image of flag of Canada Canada 17 1.58%
8 image of flag of Austria Austria 16 1.49%
9 image of flag of No geo information available No geo information available 14 1.30%
10 image of flag of United Kingdom United Kingdom 14 1.30%
    other countries 125 11.64%

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