Eroding permafrost coastlines release biodegradable dissolved organic carbon to the Arctic Ocean
Author
Bristol, Emily M.Behnke, Megan
Spencer, Robert G. M.
McKenna, Amy
Jones, Benjamin M.
Bull, Diana L.
McClelland, James W.
Keyword
permafrosteroding soils
Alaska Beaufort Sea
biodegradable dissolved organic carbon
permafrost‐derived dissolved organic carbon
coastal erosion
biodegradibility
Pleistocene marine permafrost
Holocene terrestrial permafrost
Arctic Ocean
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Coastal erosion mobilizes large quantities of organic matter (OM) to the Arctic Ocean where it may fuel greenhouse gas emissions and marine production. While the biodegradability of permafrost‐derived dissolved organic carbon (DOC) has been extensively studied in inland soils and freshwaters, few studies have examined dissolved OM (DOM) leached from eroding coastal permafrost in seawater. To address this knowledge gap, we sampled three horizons from bluff exposures near Drew Point, Alaska: seasonally thawed active layer soils, permafrost containing Holocene terrestrial and/or lacustrine OM, and permafrost containing late‐Pleistocene marine‐derived OM. Samples were leached in seawater to compare DOC yields, DOM composition (chromophoric DOM, Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry), and biodegradable DOC (BDOC). Holocene terrestrial permafrost leached the most DOC compared to active layer soils and Pleistocene marine permafrost. However, DOC from Pleistocene marine permafrost was the most biodegradable (33 ± 6% over 90 days), followed by DOC from active layer soils (23 ± 5%) and Holocene terrestrial permafrost (14 ± 3%). Permafrost leachates contained relatively more aliphatic and peptide‐like formulae, whereas active layer leachates contained relatively more aromatic formulae. BDOC was positively correlated with nitrogen‐containing and aliphatic formulae, and negatively correlated with polyphenolic and condensed aromatic formulae. Using estimates of eroding OM, we scale our results to estimate DOC and BDOC inputs to the Alaska Beaufort Sea. While DOC inputs from coastal erosion are relatively small compared to rivers, our results suggest that erosion may be an important source of BDOC to the Beaufort Sea when river inputs are low.Table of Contents
Abstract -- Plain Language Summary -- Key Points -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Study Area -- 3. Methods -- 4. Results and Discussion -- 5. Conclusions -- Acknowledgements -- Open Research -- Supporting Information -- ReferencesDate
2024-07-27Publisher
John Wiley & Sons, IncType
ArticlePeer-Reviewed
YesCitation
Bristol, E. M., Behnke, M. I., Spencer, R. G., McKenna, A., Jones, B. M., Bull, D. L., & McClelland, J. W. (2024). Eroding permafrost coastlines release biodegradable dissolved organic carbon to the Arctic Ocean. Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences, 129(7), e2024JG008233. https://doi.org/10.1029/2024JG008233Collections
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Permafrost, Vol. 03, No. 2 (Fall 1980)Alaska Association for the Arts (Permafrost, 1980)