Dissolved organic carbon loss from Yedoma permafrost amplified by ice wedge thaw
Publication date
2013
Authors
Vonk, J.E.
Mann, P.J.
Dowdy, K.L.
Davydova, A.
Davydov, S.P.
Zimov, N.
Spencer, R.G.M.
Bulygina, E.B.
Eglinton, T.I.
Holmes, R.M.
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Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
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(c) UU Universiteit Utrecht, 2013
Abstract
Pleistocene Yedoma permafrost contains nearly a third of all organic matter (OM) stored in circum-arctic
permafrost and is characterized by the presence of massive ice wedges. Due to its rapid formation by
sediment accumulation and subsequent frozen storage, Yedoma OM is relatively well preserved and highly
biologically available (biolabile) upon thaw. A better understanding of the processes regulating Yedoma
degradation is important to improve estimates of the response and magnitude of permafrost carbon
feedbacks to climate warming. In this study, we examine the composition of ice wedges and the influence of
ice wedge thaw on the biolability of Yedoma OM. Incubation assays were used to assess OM biolability,
fluorescence spectroscopy to characterize the OM composition, and potential enzyme activity rates to
examine the controls and regulation of OM degradation.We show that increasing amounts of ice wedge melt
water in Yedoma-leached incubations enhanced the loss of dissolved OM over time. This may be attributed
to the presence of low-molecular weight compounds and low initial phenolic content in the OM of ice
wedges, providing a readily available substrate that promotes the degradation of Yedoma OC. The physical
vulnerability of ice wedges upon thaw (causing irreversible collapse), combined with the composition of ice
wedge-engrained OM (co-metabolizing old OM), underlines the particularly strong potential of Yedoma to
generate a positive feedback to climate warming relative to other forms of non-ice wedge permafrost.
Keywords
Yedoma, Permafrost, ice wedges, biodegradable dissolved organic matter, enzymes, fluorescence