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Massive remobilization of permafrost carbon during post-glacial warming.


ABSTRACT: Recent hypotheses, based on atmospheric records and models, suggest that permafrost carbon (PF-C) accumulated during the last glaciation may have been an important source for the atmospheric CO2 rise during post-glacial warming. However, direct physical indications for such PF-C release have so far been absent. Here we use the Laptev Sea (Arctic Ocean) as an archive to investigate PF-C destabilization during the last glacial-interglacial period. Our results show evidence for massive supply of PF-C from Siberian soils as a result of severe active layer deepening in response to the warming. Thawing of PF-C must also have brought about an enhanced organic matter respiration and, thus, these findings suggest that PF-C may indeed have been an important source of CO2 across the extensive permafrost domain. The results challenge current paradigms on the post-glacial CO2 rise and, at the same time, serve as a harbinger for possible consequences of the present-day warming of PF-C soils.

SUBMITTER: Tesi T 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5141343 | biostudies-literature | 2016 Nov

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Massive remobilization of permafrost carbon during post-glacial warming.

Tesi T T   Muschitiello F F   Smittenberg R H RH   Jakobsson M M   Vonk J E JE   Hill P P   Andersson A A   Kirchner N N   Noormets R R   Dudarev O O   Semiletov I I   Gustafsson Ö Ö  

Nature communications 20161129


Recent hypotheses, based on atmospheric records and models, suggest that permafrost carbon (PF-C) accumulated during the last glaciation may have been an important source for the atmospheric CO<sub>2</sub> rise during post-glacial warming. However, direct physical indications for such PF-C release have so far been absent. Here we use the Laptev Sea (Arctic Ocean) as an archive to investigate PF-C destabilization during the last glacial-interglacial period. Our results show evidence for massive s  ...[more]

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