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Amorphous silica pools in permafrost soils of the Central Canadian Arctic and the potential impact of climate change

Alfredsson, Hanna LU ; Hugelius, G. ; Clymans, Wim LU ; Stadmark, Johanna LU ; Kuhry, P. and Conley, Daniel LU (2015) In Biogeochemistry 124(1-3). p.441-459
Abstract
We investigated the distribution, storage and landscape partitioning of soil amorphous silica (ASi) in a central Canadian region dominated by tundra and peatlands to provide a first estimate of the amount of ASi stored in Arctic permafrost ecosystems. We hypothesize that, similar to soil organic matter, Arctic soils store large amounts of ASi which may be affected by projected climate changes and associated changes in permafrost regimes. Average soil ASi storage (top 1 m) ranged between 9600 and 83,500 kg SiO2 ha(-1) among different land-cover types. Lichen tundra contained the lowest amounts of ASi while no significant differences were found in ASi storage among other land-cover types. Clear differences were observed between ASi storage... (More)
We investigated the distribution, storage and landscape partitioning of soil amorphous silica (ASi) in a central Canadian region dominated by tundra and peatlands to provide a first estimate of the amount of ASi stored in Arctic permafrost ecosystems. We hypothesize that, similar to soil organic matter, Arctic soils store large amounts of ASi which may be affected by projected climate changes and associated changes in permafrost regimes. Average soil ASi storage (top 1 m) ranged between 9600 and 83,500 kg SiO2 ha(-1) among different land-cover types. Lichen tundra contained the lowest amounts of ASi while no significant differences were found in ASi storage among other land-cover types. Clear differences were observed between ASi storage allocated into the top organic versus the mineral horizon of soils. Bog peatlands, fen peatlands and wet shrub tundra stored between 7090 and 45,400 kg SiO2 ha(-1) in the top organic horizon, while the corresponding storage in lichen tundra, moist shrub- and dry shrub tundra only amounted to 1500-1760 kg SiO2 ha(-1). Diatoms and phytoliths are important components of ASi storage in the top organic horizon of peatlands and shrub tundra systems, while it appears to be a negligible component of ASi storage in the mineral horizon of shrub tundra classes. ASi concentrations decrease with depth in the soil profile for fen peatlands and all shrub tundra classes, suggesting recycling of ASi, whereas bog peatlands appeared to act as sinks retaining stored ASi on millennial time scales. Our results provide a conceptual framework to assess the potential effects of climate change impacts on terrestrial Si cycling in the Arctic. We believe that ASi stored in peatlands are particularly sensitive to climate change, because a larger fraction of the ASi pool is stored in perennially frozen ground compared to shrub tundra systems. A likely outcome of climate warming and permafrost thaw could be mobilization of previously frozen ASi, altered soil storage of biogenically derived ASi and an increased Si flux to the Arctic Ocean. (Less)
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author
; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Amorphous silica, Arctic, Climate change, Peatlands, Permafrost, Terrestrial Si cycle, Tundra
in
Biogeochemistry
volume
124
issue
1-3
pages
441 - 459
publisher
Springer
external identifiers
  • wos:000355620200028
  • scopus:84930275299
ISSN
1573-515X
DOI
10.1007/s10533-015-0108-1
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
8f638b75-801a-4db9-a4f6-789035d0b5d0 (old id 7613652)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 10:51:46
date last changed
2022-04-04 22:02:48
@article{8f638b75-801a-4db9-a4f6-789035d0b5d0,
  abstract     = {{We investigated the distribution, storage and landscape partitioning of soil amorphous silica (ASi) in a central Canadian region dominated by tundra and peatlands to provide a first estimate of the amount of ASi stored in Arctic permafrost ecosystems. We hypothesize that, similar to soil organic matter, Arctic soils store large amounts of ASi which may be affected by projected climate changes and associated changes in permafrost regimes. Average soil ASi storage (top 1 m) ranged between 9600 and 83,500 kg SiO2 ha(-1) among different land-cover types. Lichen tundra contained the lowest amounts of ASi while no significant differences were found in ASi storage among other land-cover types. Clear differences were observed between ASi storage allocated into the top organic versus the mineral horizon of soils. Bog peatlands, fen peatlands and wet shrub tundra stored between 7090 and 45,400 kg SiO2 ha(-1) in the top organic horizon, while the corresponding storage in lichen tundra, moist shrub- and dry shrub tundra only amounted to 1500-1760 kg SiO2 ha(-1). Diatoms and phytoliths are important components of ASi storage in the top organic horizon of peatlands and shrub tundra systems, while it appears to be a negligible component of ASi storage in the mineral horizon of shrub tundra classes. ASi concentrations decrease with depth in the soil profile for fen peatlands and all shrub tundra classes, suggesting recycling of ASi, whereas bog peatlands appeared to act as sinks retaining stored ASi on millennial time scales. Our results provide a conceptual framework to assess the potential effects of climate change impacts on terrestrial Si cycling in the Arctic. We believe that ASi stored in peatlands are particularly sensitive to climate change, because a larger fraction of the ASi pool is stored in perennially frozen ground compared to shrub tundra systems. A likely outcome of climate warming and permafrost thaw could be mobilization of previously frozen ASi, altered soil storage of biogenically derived ASi and an increased Si flux to the Arctic Ocean.}},
  author       = {{Alfredsson, Hanna and Hugelius, G. and Clymans, Wim and Stadmark, Johanna and Kuhry, P. and Conley, Daniel}},
  issn         = {{1573-515X}},
  keywords     = {{Amorphous silica; Arctic; Climate change; Peatlands; Permafrost; Terrestrial Si cycle; Tundra}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{1-3}},
  pages        = {{441--459}},
  publisher    = {{Springer}},
  series       = {{Biogeochemistry}},
  title        = {{Amorphous silica pools in permafrost soils of the Central Canadian Arctic and the potential impact of climate change}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10533-015-0108-1}},
  doi          = {{10.1007/s10533-015-0108-1}},
  volume       = {{124}},
  year         = {{2015}},
}