Department of Biological Sciences, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, Alabama.
Rubenstein School of Environment & Natural Resources, University of Vermont, Burlington, Vermont.
Glob Chang Biol. 2018 Dec;24(12):5738-5750. doi: 10.1111/gcb.14448. Epub 2018 Oct 25.
Rapidly, increasing air temperatures across the Arctic are thawing permafrost and exposing vast quantities of organic carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus to microbial processing. Shifts in the absolute and relative supplies of these elements will likely alter patterns of ecosystem productivity and change the way carbon and nutrients are delivered from upland areas to surface waters such as rivers and lakes. The ultra-oligotrophic nature of surface waters across the Arctic renders these ecosystems particularly susceptible to changes in productivity and food web dynamics as permafrost thaw alters terrestrial-aquatic linkages. The objectives of this study were to evaluate decadal-scale patterns in surface water chemistry and assess potential implications of changing water chemistry to benthic organic matter and aquatic food webs. Data were collected from the upper Kuparuk River on the North Slope of Alaska by the U.S. National Science Foundation's Long-Term Ecological Research program during 1978-2014. Analyses of these data show increases in stream water alkalinity and cation concentrations consistent with signatures of permafrost thaw. Changes are also documented for discharge-corrected nitrate concentrations (+), discharge-corrected dissolved organic carbon concentrations (-), total phosphorus concentrations (-), and δ C isotope values of aquatic invertebrate consumers (-). These changes show that warming temperatures and thawing permafrost in the upland environment are leading to shifts in the supply of carbon and nutrients available to surface waters and consequently changing resources that support aquatic food webs. This demonstrates that physical, geochemical, and biological changes associated with warming permafrost are fundamentally altering linkages between upland and aquatic ecosystems in rapidly changing arctic environments.
北极地区的气温迅速升高,导致永久冻土融化,使大量有机碳、氮和磷暴露在微生物的作用下。这些元素的绝对和相对供应量的变化可能会改变生态系统生产力的模式,并改变从高地向河流和湖泊等地表水输送碳和养分的方式。北极地区地表水的超寡营养特性使得这些生态系统特别容易受到生产力变化和食物网动态的影响,因为永久冻土融化改变了陆地-水域的联系。本研究的目的是评估地表水化学的十年尺度模式,并评估水化学变化对底栖有机物质和水生食物网的潜在影响。这些数据是由美国国家科学基金会的长期生态研究计划于 1978-2014 年在阿拉斯加北坡的上库帕鲁克河收集的。对这些数据的分析表明,河水的碱度和阳离子浓度增加,与永久冻土融化的特征一致。还记录了经流量校正的硝酸盐浓度(+)、经流量校正的溶解有机碳浓度(-)、总磷浓度(-)和水生无脊椎动物消费者的 δ C 同位素值(-)的变化。这些变化表明,高地环境中的变暖温度和永久冻土融化导致了地表水可利用的碳和养分供应的变化,并因此改变了支持水生食物网的资源。这表明,与变暖的永久冻土相关的物理、地球化学和生物变化正在从根本上改变快速变化的北极环境中高地和水生生态系统之间的联系。