Title of article :
Vulnerability of permafrost carbon to global warming. Part I: model description and role of heat generated by organic matter decomposition
Author/Authors :
By D. V. KHVOROSTYANOV، نويسنده , , By G. KRINNER ، نويسنده , , P. CIAIS، نويسنده , , M. HEIMANN، نويسنده , , S. A. ZIMOV، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Abstract :
We constructed a new model to study the sensitivity of permafrost carbon stocks to future climate warming. The
one-dimensional model solves an equation for diffusion of heat penetrating from the overlying atmosphere and takes
into account additional in situ heat production by active soil microorganisms. Decomposition of frozen soil organic
matter and produced CO2 and methane fluxes result from an interplay of soil heat conduction and phase transitions,
respiration, methanogenesis and methanotrophy processes. Respiration and methanotrophy consume soil oxygen and
thus can only develop in an aerated top-soil column. In contrast, methanogenesis is not limited by oxygen and can be
sustained within the deep soil, releasing sufficient heat to further thawin depth the frozen carbon-rich soil organic matter.
Heat production that accompanies decomposition and methanotrophy can be an essential process providing positive
feedback to atmospheric warming through self-sustaining transformation of initially frozen soil carbon into CO2 and
CH4. This supplementary heat becomes crucial, however, only under certain climate conditions. Oxygen limitation to soil
respiration slows down the process, so that the mean flux of carbon released during the phase of intense decomposition
is more than two times less than without oxygen limitation. Taking into account methanogenesis increases the mean
carbon flux by 20%. Part II of this study deals with mobilization of frozen carbon stock in transient climate change
scenarios with more elaborated methane module, which makes it possible to consider more general cases with various
site configurations. Part I (this manuscript) studies mobilization of 400 GtC carbon stock of the Yedoma in response to
a stepwise rapid warming focusing on the role of supplementary heat that is released to the soil during decomposition
of organic matter
Journal title :
Tellus.Series B
Journal title :
Tellus.Series B