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  • AWI_PerDyn; Permafrost Research (Periglacial Dynamics) @ AWI  (3)
  • AWI Arctic Land Expedition; Carbon dioxide, flux, in mass CO2 carbon, per soil carbon mass; Carbon dioxide, flux, in mass CO2 carbon per area; Carbon in Permafrost / Kohlenstoff im Permafrost; carbon turnover; CARBOPERM; CH4 flux; CLICCS; CliSAP; Cluster of Excellence: Climate, Climatic Change, and Society; CO2 flux; DATE/TIME; Event label; Formation, turnover and release of carbon in Siberian permafrost landscapes; heterotrophic respiration; Integrated Climate System Analysis and Prediction; KoPF; Kur 2; Kur 4; Kur 5; Kur 6; Kur 7; Kur 8; Kur 9; L16_SF1; L16_SF3; L16_SF4; L16_SF5; L16_SF6; L16_TM1; L16_TM2; L19_SF3; L19_SF6; L19_TM1; L19_TM2; LATITUDE; Lena2016_spring, Lena2016_summer; Lena 2019; LONGITUDE; Methane, flux, in mass CH4 carbon, per soil carbon mass; Methane, flux, in mass CH4 carbon per area; Permafrost; RU-Land_2016_Lena; RU-Land_2019_Lena; Siberian Arctic; SOIL; Soil profile; Station label  (1)
  • Late Holocene
  • biogeochemical processes
  • ddc:551
Schlagwörter
Verlag/Herausgeber
Sprache
Erscheinungszeitraum
  • 1
    Publikationsdatum: 2023-08-25
    Beschreibung: Since the beginning of the Anthropocene, lacustrine biodiversity has been influenced by climate change and human activities. These factors advance the spread of harmful cyanobacteria in lakes around the world, which affects water quality and impairs the aquatic food chain. In this study, we assessed changes in cyanobacterial community dynamics via sedimentary DNA (sedaDNA) from well-dated lake sediments of Lake Tiefer See, which is part of the Klocksin Lake Chain spanning the last 350 years. Our diversity and community analysis revealed that cyanobacterial communities form clusters according to the presence or absence of varves. Based on distance-based redundancy and variation partitioning analyses (dbRDA and VPA) we identified that intensified lake circulation inferred from vegetation openness reconstructions, δ13C data (a proxy for varve preservation) and total nitrogen content were abiotic factors that significantly explained the variation in the reconstructed cyanobacterial community from Lake Tiefer See sediments. Operational taxonomic units (OTUs) assigned to Microcystis sp. and Aphanizomenon sp. were identified as potential eutrophication-driven taxa of growing importance since circa common era (ca. CE) 1920 till present. This result is corroborated by a cyanobacteria lipid biomarker analysis. Furthermore, we suggest that stronger lake circulation as indicated by non-varved sediments favoured the deposition of the non-photosynthetic cyanobacteria sister clade Sericytochromatia, whereas lake bottom anoxia as indicated by subrecent- and recent varves favoured the Melainabacteria in sediments. Our findings highlight the potential of high-resolution amplicon sequencing in investigating the dynamics of past cyanobacterial communities in lake sediments and show that lake circulation, anoxic conditions, and human-induced eutrophication are main factors explaining variations in the cyanobacteria community in Lake Tiefer See during the last 350 years.
    Beschreibung: Virtual Institute of Integrated Climate and Landscape Evolution Analyses -ICLEA-
    Beschreibung: Leibniz-Gemeinschaft http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001664
    Beschreibung: Helmholtz-Gemeinschaft (DE)
    Beschreibung: Deutsche Bundesstiftung Umwelt http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100007636
    Beschreibung: Helmholtz-Zentrum Potsdam Deutsches GeoForschungsZentrum - GFZ (4217)
    Schlagwort(e): ddc:577.6 ; Late Holocene ; Methylheptadecanes ; Varves ; Anthropocene ; Sericytochromatia ; Melainabacteria
    Sprache: Englisch
    Materialart: doc-type:article
    Standort Signatur Erwartet Verfügbarkeit
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  • 2
    facet.materialart.
    Unbekannt
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Overduin, Pier Paul; Liebner, Susanne; Knoblauch, Christian; Günther, Frank; Wetterich, Sebastian; Schirrmeister, Lutz; Hubberten, Hans-Wolfgang; Grigoriev, Mikhail N (2015): Methane oxidation following submarine permafrost degradation: Measurements from a central Laptev Sea shelf borehole. Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences, 120(5), 965-978, https://doi.org/10.1002/2014JG002862
    Publikationsdatum: 2023-03-07
    Beschreibung: Submarine permafrost degradation has been invoked as a cause for recent observations of methane emissions from the seabed to the water column and atmosphere of the East Siberian shelf. Sediment drilled 52 m down from the sea ice in Buor Khaya Bay, central Laptev Sea revealed unfrozen sediment overlying ice-bonded permafrost. Methane concentrations in the overlying unfrozen sediment were low (mean 20 µM) but higher in the underlying ice-bonded submarine permafrost (mean 380 µM). In contrast, sulfate concentrations were substantially higher in the unfrozen sediment (mean 2.5 mM) than in the underlying submarine permafrost (mean 0.1 mM). Using deduced permafrost degradation rates, we calculate potential mean methane efflux from degrading permafrost of 120 mg/m**2 per year at this site. However, a drop of methane concentrations from 190 µM to 19 µM and a concomitant increase of methane d13C from -63 per mil to -35 per mil directly above the ice-bonded permafrost suggest that methane is effectively oxidized within the overlying unfrozen sediment before it reaches the water column. High rates of methane ebullition into the water column observed elsewhere are thus unlikely to have ice-bonded permafrost as their source.
    Schlagwort(e): AWI_PerDyn; Permafrost Research (Periglacial Dynamics) @ AWI
    Materialart: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
    Standort Signatur Erwartet Verfügbarkeit
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  • 3
    facet.materialart.
    Unbekannt
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Mitzscherling, Julia; Horn, Fabian; Winterfeld, Maria; Mahler, Linda; Kallmeyer, Jens; Overduin, Pier Paul; Schirrmeister, Lutz; Winkel, Matthias; Grigoriev, Mikhail N; Wagner, Dirk; Liebner, Susanne (2019): Microbial community composition and abundance after millennia of submarine permafrost warming. Biogeosciences, 16(19), 3941-3958, https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-16-3941-2019
    Publikationsdatum: 2023-03-07
    Beschreibung: The mobilization of carbon in degrading permafrost is a long-term process and an important feedback upon climate change. Under submarine conditions substantial permafrost warming occurs millennia before permafrost thaws, potentially stimulating microbial communities. How microbial community composition and abundance responded to millennial-scale permafrost warming remains, however, unkown. We measured the in situ development of bacterial community composition and abundance together with temperature, salinity and pore water chemistry along an onshore-offshore transect on the Siberian Arctic Shelf. Samples derived from ice-bonded terrestrial permafrost comparable in age and sedimentation history that had been warming by more than 10 °C over the last 2500 years. Bacterial assemblages identified through amplicon sequencing correlated only weakly with temperature but strongly with pore water stable isotope signatures. They showed a significant spatial variation. Bacterial 16S rRNA gene copies quantified through qPCR negatively correlated with rising temperature, while both gene copies and total cell counts negatively correlated with increasing pore water salinity. Correlations of microbial community composition and abundance to stable isotope signatures and pore water salinity imply that they still mainly reflect the sedimentation history. On time-scales of centuries, permafrost warming coincided with decreasing microbial abundances, whereas millennia after inundation, microbial cell abundance was similar to onshore permafrost. We suggest that, as long as permafrost remains frozen the effect of warming alone on the permafrost-carbon-feedback is marginally even on time-scales of millennia because it has an overall low-level effect on microbial community composition and abundance.
    Schlagwort(e): AWI_PerDyn; Permafrost Research (Periglacial Dynamics) @ AWI
    Materialart: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
    Standort Signatur Erwartet Verfügbarkeit
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  • 4
    facet.materialart.
    Unbekannt
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Mitzscherling, Julia; Winkel, Matthias; Winterfeld, Maria; Horn, Fabian; Yang, Sizhong; Grigoriev, Mikhail N; Wagner, Dirk; Overduin, Pier Paul; Liebner, Susanne (2017): The development of permafrost bacterial communities under submarine conditions. Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences, 122(7), 1689-1704, https://doi.org/10.1002/2017JG003859
    Publikationsdatum: 2024-02-06
    Beschreibung: Submarine permafrost is more vulnerable to thawing than permafrost on land. Besides increased heat transfer from the ocean water, the penetration of salt lowers the freezing temperature and accelerates permafrost degradation. This data set provides sediment temperatures and pore water chemistry from two submarine permafrost cores from the Laptev Sea on the East Siberian Arctic Shelf which inundated about 540 and 2500 years ago. These data are published in partnership with a paper by Magritz et al., that traces how bacterial communities develop depending on duration of the marine influence and pore water chemistry. Magritz et al. (2017) show that submarine permafrost is a source of microbial life deep below the seafloor where it forms an unusual, non-steady state habitat. Pore water chemistry revealed different pore water units that reflected stages of permafrost thaw. Millennia after inundation by sea water, bacteria stratify into communities in permafrost, marine-affected permafrost, and seabed sediments. In contrast to pore water chemistry, the development of bacterial community structure, diversity and abundance in submarine permafrost appear site-specific, suggesting that both sedimentation and permafrost thaw histories strongly affect bacteria. Finally, highest total cell counts, DNA concentrations and bacterial gene copy numbers were observed in the ice-bonded unaffected permafrost unit of the longer inundated core, suggesting that permafrost bacterial communities exposed to submarine conditions proliferate millennia after warming.
    Schlagwort(e): AWI_PerDyn; Permafrost Research (Periglacial Dynamics) @ AWI
    Materialart: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
    Standort Signatur Erwartet Verfügbarkeit
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  • 5
    Publikationsdatum: 2024-06-12
    Beschreibung: The dataset comprises in situ CO2 and CH4 fluxes from different non-vegetated soils in an active thaw slump in the Lena Delta, Siberia, Russia, measured in July 2019 and July 2019.
    Schlagwort(e): AWI Arctic Land Expedition; Carbon dioxide, flux, in mass CO2 carbon, per soil carbon mass; Carbon dioxide, flux, in mass CO2 carbon per area; Carbon in Permafrost / Kohlenstoff im Permafrost; carbon turnover; CARBOPERM; CH4 flux; CLICCS; CliSAP; Cluster of Excellence: Climate, Climatic Change, and Society; CO2 flux; DATE/TIME; Event label; Formation, turnover and release of carbon in Siberian permafrost landscapes; heterotrophic respiration; Integrated Climate System Analysis and Prediction; KoPF; Kur 2; Kur 4; Kur 5; Kur 6; Kur 7; Kur 8; Kur 9; L16_SF1; L16_SF3; L16_SF4; L16_SF5; L16_SF6; L16_TM1; L16_TM2; L19_SF3; L19_SF6; L19_TM1; L19_TM2; LATITUDE; Lena2016_spring, Lena2016_summer; Lena 2019; LONGITUDE; Methane, flux, in mass CH4 carbon, per soil carbon mass; Methane, flux, in mass CH4 carbon per area; Permafrost; RU-Land_2016_Lena; RU-Land_2019_Lena; Siberian Arctic; SOIL; Soil profile; Station label
    Materialart: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 1601 data points
    Standort Signatur Erwartet Verfügbarkeit
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  • 6
    Publikationsdatum: 2022-04-07
    Beschreibung: The decomposition of thawing permafrost organic matter (OM) to the greenhouse gases (GHG) carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane forms a positive feedback to global climate change. Data on in situ GHG fluxes from thawing permafrost OM are scarce and OM degradability is largely unknown, causing high uncertainties in the permafrost‐carbon climate feedback. We combined in situ CO2 and methane flux measurements at an abrupt permafrost thaw feature with laboratory incubations and dynamic modeling to quantify annual CO2 release from thawing permafrost OM, estimate its in situ degradability and evaluate the explanatory power of incubation experiments. In July 2016 and 2019, CO2 fluxes ranged between 0.24 and 2.6 g CO2‐C m−2 d−1. Methane fluxes were low, which coincided with the absence of active methanogens in the Pleistocene permafrost. CO2 fluxes were lower three years after initial thaw after normalizing these fluxes to thawed carbon, indicating the depletion of labile carbon. Higher CO2 fluxes from thawing Pleistocene permafrost than from Holocene permafrost indicate OM preservation for millennia and give evidence that microbial activity in the permafrost was not substantial. Short‐term incubations overestimated in situ CO2 fluxes but underestimated methane fluxes. Two independent models simulated median annual CO2 fluxes of 160 and 184 g CO2‐C m−2 from the thaw slump, which include 25%–31% CO2 emissions during winter. Annual CO2 fluxes represent 0.8% of the carbon pool thawed in the surface soil. Our results demonstrate the potential of abrupt thaw processes to transform the tundra from carbon neutral into a substantial GHG source.
    Beschreibung: Plain Language Summary: Thawing of permanently frozen soils (permafrost) in the northern hemisphere forms a threat to global climate since these soils contain large amounts of frozen organic carbon, which might be decomposed to the greenhouse gases (GHGs) carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane upon thaw. How fast these GHGs are produced is largely unknown, since field observations of greenhouse gas fluxes from thawing permafrost are too sparse. Consequently, simulations on the effect of thawing permafrost soils on future climate are highly uncertain. We measured CO2 and methane fluxes from soils affected by abrupt permafrost thaw in Siberia during two summer seasons. We used these field observations and long‐term incubation data to calibrate two models that simulate the CO2 release over a whole year. We found that greenhouse gas fluxes were dominated by CO2 and that the minor importance of methane was due to the absence of methane producing microorganisms in the Pleistocene permafrost. The CO2 release in the first year accounted for 0.8% of thawed permafrost carbon but decomposition rates decreased after the depletion of the rapidly decomposable organic matter. Abrupt permafrost thaw turned the tundra into a substantial source of CO2, of which 25%–31% was released in the non‐growing season.
    Beschreibung: Key Points: Abrupt permafrost thaw turned the tundra into a substantial annual source of CO2 of which 25%–31% were released in the non‐growing season. About 0.8% of thawed permafrost carbon was decomposed to CO2 in one year but decomposition rates declined after the loss of labile carbon. Methane contributed a minor fraction to total greenhouse gas fluxes also because of a low methanogen abundance in Pleistocene permafrost.
    Beschreibung: German Ministry for Education and Research
    Beschreibung: German Research Foundation
    Beschreibung: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5584710
    Schlagwort(e): ddc:551
    Sprache: Englisch
    Materialart: doc-type:article
    Standort Signatur Erwartet Verfügbarkeit
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  • 7
    Publikationsdatum: 2021-12-06
    Beschreibung: Abstract Although the majority of coastal sediments consist of sandy material, in some areas marine ingression caused the submergence of terrestrial carbon-rich peat soils. This affects the coastal carbon balance, as peat represents a potential carbon source. We performed a column experiment to better understand the coupled flow and biogeochemical processes governing carbon transformations in submerged peat under coastal fresh groundwater (GW) discharge and brackish water intrusion. The columns contained naturally layered sediments with and without peat (organic carbon content in peat 39 ± 14 wt%), alternately supplied with oxygen-rich brackish water from above and oxygen-poor, low-saline GW from below. The low-saline GW discharge through the peat significantly increased the release and ascent of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) from the peat (δ13CDOC − 26.9‰ to − 27.7‰), which was accompanied by the production of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) and emission of carbon dioxide (CO2), implying DOC mineralization. Oxygen respiration, sulfate (SO42−) reduction, and methane (CH4) formation were differently pronounced in the sediments and were accompanied with higher microbial abundances in peat compared to sand with SO42−-reducing bacteria clearly dominating methanogens. With decreasing salinity and SO42− concentrations, CH4 emission rates increased from 16.5 to 77.3 μmol m−2 d−1 during a 14-day, low-saline GW discharge phase. In contrast, oxygenated brackish water intrusion resulted in lower DOC and DIC pore water concentrations and significantly lower CH4 and CO2 emissions. Our study illustrates the strong dependence of carbon cycling in shallow coastal areas with submerged peat deposits on the flow and mixing dynamics within the subterranean estuary.
    Schlagwort(e): 550.724 ; coastal peatlands ; coastal peatlands ; biogeochemical processes ; carbon release ; column experiments
    Sprache: Englisch
    Materialart: map
    Standort Signatur Erwartet Verfügbarkeit
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