The influence of vegetation and soil characteristics on active-layer thickness of permafrost soils in boreal forest
Carbon release from thawing permafrost soils could significantly exacerbate global warming as the active-layer deepens, exposing more carbon to decay. Plant community and soil properties provide a major control on this by influencing the maximum depth of thaw each summer (active-layer thickness; ALT...
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Zusammenfassung: | Carbon release from thawing permafrost soils could significantly exacerbate global warming as the active-layer deepens,
exposing more carbon to decay. Plant community and soil properties provide a major control on this by influencing
the maximum depth of thaw each summer (active-layer thickness; ALT), but a quantitative understanding of the
relative importance of plant and soil characteristics, and their interactions in determine ALTs, is currently lacking. To
address this, we undertook an extensive survey of multiple vegetation and edaphic characteristics and ALTs across
multiple plots in four field sites within boreal forest in the discontinuous permafrost zone (NWT, Canada). Our sites
included mature black spruce, burned black spruce and paper birch, allowing us to determine vegetation and
edaphic drivers that emerge as the most important and broadly applicable across these key vegetation and disturbance
gradients, as well as providing insight into site-specific differences. Across sites, the most important vegetation
characteristics limiting thaw (shallower ALTs) were tree leaf area index (LAI), moss layer thickness and understory
LAI in that order. Thicker soil organic layers also reduced ALTs, though were less influential than moss thickness.
Surface moisture (0–6 cm) promoted increased ALTs, whereas deeper soil moisture (11–16 cm) acted to modify the
impact of the vegetation, in particular increasing the importance of understory or tree canopy shading in reducing
thaw. These direct and indirect effects of moisture indicate that future changes in precipitation and evapotranspiration
may have large influences on ALTs. Our work also suggests that forest fires cause greater ALTs by simultaneously
decreasing multiple ecosystem characteristics which otherwise protect permafrost. Given that vegetation and
edaphic characteristics have such clear and large influences on ALTs, our data provide a key benchmark against
which to evaluate process models used to predict future impacts of climate warming on permafrost degradation and
subsequent feedback to climate. |
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DOI: | 10.1111/gcb.13248 |