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Estimation of Permafrost SOC Stock and Turnover Time Using a Land Surface Model With Vertical Heterogeneity of Permafrost Soils

Shijie Shu, Atul K. Jain, Charles D. Koven, Umakant Mishra

2020Global Biogeochemical Cycles73 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract We developed vertically resolved soil biogeochemistry (carbon and nitrogen) module and implemented it into a land surface model, ISAM. The model captures the vertical heterogeneity of the northern high latitudes permafrost soil organic carbon (SOC). We also implemented Δ 14 C to estimate SOC turnover time, a critical determinant of SOC stocks, sequestration potential, and the carbon cycle feedback under changing atmospheric CO 2 concentration [CO 2 ] and climate. ISAM accounted for the vertical movement of SOC caused by cryoturbation and its linkage to frost heaving process, oxygen availability, organo‐mineral interaction, and depth‐dependent environmental modifiers. After evaluating the model processes using the site and regional level heterotrophic respiration, SOC stocks, and soil Δ 14 C profiles, the vertically resolved soil biogeochemistry version of the model (ISAM‐1D) estimated permafrost SOC turnover time of 1,443 years, which is about 3 times more than the estimation based on the without vertically resolved version of ISAM (ISAM‐0D). ISAM‐1D‐simulated SOC stocks for permafrost regions was 319 Pg C in the top 1 m soil depth by the 2000s, about 80% higher than the estimates based on ISAM‐0D. ISAM‐1D SOC stock and turnover time were compared well with the observations. However, the longer SOC turnover time preserves less SOC stocks due to the lower carbon use efficiency (CUE) for SOC than ISAM‐0D and thus respires more SOC than being transferred downward by cryoturbation. ISAM‐1D simulated reduced SOC sequestration (3.7 Pg C) compared to ISAM‐0D (4.8 Pg C) and published Earth system models (ESMs) over the 1860s–2000s, due to weaker [CO 2 ]‐carbon cycle and stronger climate‐carbon cycle feedbacks, highlighting the importance of the vertically heterogeneous soil for understanding the permafrost SOC sinks.

Topics & Concepts

PermafrostSoil carbonBiogeochemistryEnvironmental scienceCarbon stockLand coverSoil scienceAtmospheric sciencesSoil waterGeologyClimate changeLand useOceanographyEcologyBiologyClimate change and permafrostCryospheric studies and observationsPeatlands and Wetlands Ecology