| Literature DB >> 28378792 |
Balathandayuthabani Panneer Selvam1, Jean-François Lapierre2, Francois Guillemette3, Carolina Voigt4, Richard E Lamprecht4, Christina Biasi4, Torben R Christensen1,5, Pertti J Martikainen4, Martin Berggren1.
Abstract
Global warming can substantially affect the export of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) from peat-permafrost to aquatic systems. The direct degradability of such peat-derived DOC, however, is poorly constrained because previous permafrost thaw studies have mainly addressed mineral soil catchments or DOC pools that have already been processed in surface waters. We incubated peat cores from a palsa mire to compare an active layer and an experimentally thawed permafrost layer with regard to DOC composition and degradation potentials of pore water DOC. Our results show that DOC from the thawed permafrost layer had high initial degradation potentials compared with DOC from the active layer. In fact, the DOC that showed the highest bio- and photo-degradability, respectively, originated in the thawed permafrost layer. Our study sheds new light on the DOC composition of peat-permafrost directly upon thaw and suggests that past estimates of carbon-dioxide emissions from thawed peat permafrost may be biased as they have overlooked the initial mineralization potential of the exported DOC.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28378792 PMCID: PMC5395014 DOI: 10.1038/srep45811
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Dissolved organic carbon (DOC) composition in the active layer (n = 8) and the thawed permafrost layer (n = 8).
The plots show (a) Fluorescece index (FI), (b) Humification index (HIX), (c) absorbtion ratio (a254/a365), (d) Freshness index (FRESH), (e) Humic-like fluorescence component (C1), (f) Humic-like fluorescence component (C2), (g) Humic-like fluorescence component (C4), and (h) protein-like fluorescent component (C6) are the DOC composition. Error bars indicate standard deviation of the mean. See section 2.1 for details of core collection and incubation.
Figure 2DOC degradation in the active layer (n = 8) and the thawed permafrost t layer (n = 8).
For bio-degradation,the plots show (a) Bacterial production normalized to DOC (BP-DOC), (b) Bacterial respiration normalized to DOC (BR-DOC), (c) Bacterial carbon consumption normalized to DOC (BCC-DOC), and (d) Bacterial growth efficiency (BGE). In the plot (e) the DOC degradation rate per unit irradiation absorbed (PD-Ew) is shown. Error bars indicate standard deviation of the mean. The plot (f) absorbtion ratio (a254/a365) vs PD-Ew (n = 16) and (g) BR-DOC vs PD-Ew (n = 16) are pearson correlation. See sections 2.3 and 2.4 for details of bio- and photo-degradation experiments, respectively.