Researchers have uncovered a new reason for increased methane emissions from a thawing permafrost bog in Alaska: early spring rainfall.
Arctic permafrost is thawing as the Earth warms due to climate change. In some cases, scientists predict that this thawing soil will release increasing amounts of methane—a potent greenhouse gas—that is known to trap more heat in our planet’s atmosphere.
“We saw the plants going crazy and methane emissions going bonkers.”
The rainfall warms up the bog and promotes the growth of plants and methane-producing microbes. The team shows that early precipitation in 2016 warmed the bog about three weeks earlier than usual, and increased the bog’s methane emissions by 30 percent compared to previous years. These results appear in .
“In general, the chance of generating methane goes up with increased rainfall because soils get waterlogged. But what we see here is different,” says corresponding author Rebecca Neumann, an associate professor in the University of Washington department of civil and environmental engineering.
“Early rainfall sent a slog of warm water moving into our bog. We believe microbes in the bog got excited because they were warmed up, so they released nutrients from the soil that allowed more plant growth. Methane production and emission are tightly linked with soil temperature and plant growth.
“Our results emphasize that these permafrost regions are sensitive to the thermal effects of rain, and because we’re anticipating that these environments are going to get wetter in the future, we could be seeing increases in methane emissions that we weren’t expecting.”
An Alaskan bog
In northern latitudes, bogs form when ice-rich permafrost thaws. The thawed area sinks relative to the surrounding landscape as the ice melts, and soil becomes waterlogged, creating a wetland with grassy plants called sedges growing across the surface.
Neumann and her team studied a thawing permafrost bog located about 20 miles from Fairbanks, Alaska from 2014 through 2016. Over the years, the researchers tracked methane emissions in and around the bog, sedge plant growth, and soil temperature at 16 different depths.
In 2016, the team saw temperatures at the edge of the bog increase 20 days earlier, and cumulative methane emissions across the bog increase by 30 percent as compared to the previous years.
“We saw the plants going crazy and methane emissions going bonkers,” Neumann says. “2016 had above average rainfall, but so did 2014. So what was different about this year?”
The key turns out to be the timing of the precipitation: The spring rainfall started earlier in 2016 compared to 2014. In the spring the ground is colder than the air. So the rain, which is the same temperature as the air, warms up the ground as it enters the soil. The earlier the spring rains come, the sooner the soil in the surrounding forest gets saturated. Any surplus rain then flows down into the bog, rapidly warming the bog soils.
The warm soil aids microbes living in the bog and speeds up their metabolisms. Normally microbes use oxygen to break down organic matter, and they release carbon dioxide into the air. But in waterlogged soils, like a bog created by permafrost thaw, there’s no oxygen around. So the microbes have to use whatever is available, and they end up converting organic matter into methane.
“It’s the bottom of the barrel in terms of energy production for them,” Neumann says. “The microbes in this bog on some level are like ‘Oh man, we’re stuck making methane because that’s all this bog is allowing us to do.'”
The trouble with sedges
At the same time ,the warmer soil also fuels the sedge plants. In 2016, the team found more of these plants at the warmer edges of the bog. Sedges, like most plants, take carbon dioxide from the air to make their food, which they send to their roots to help them grow. Sometimes the food leaks out of the roots into the soil where it can become food for the microbes. So more sedges directly fuel the microbes to make more methane.
In addition, sedges contain hollow, air-filled tubes that allow oxygen to flow from the air to their roots. These tubes also allow the microbes’ methane to escape the bog and enter the atmosphere.
“The plants are really doing two things,” Neumann says. “They’re providing yummy carbon that lets the microbes make more methane than they would have otherwise. The plants also provide a conduit that allows methane to escape into the atmosphere. They’re a double whammy for methane production and emission.”
More rain
As the Earth warms, these northern latitude regions are expected to experience more rainfall. If this rain falls in spring or early summer, these areas could release more methane into the atmosphere than is currently predicted. Neumann and her team plan to examine methane emissions from other bogs to see if this pattern holds true across northern latitudes.
“In general, the ability of rain to transport thermal energy into soils has been underappreciated,” Neumann says. “Our study shows that by affecting soil temperature and methane emissions, rain can increase the ability of thawing permafrost landscapes to warm the climate.”
Coauthors are from the University of Washington; Kansas State University; SMRU consulting; the US Geological Survey; the University of Alaska Fairbanks; the University of Guelph. Funding came from the US Department of Energy Office of ¾ÅÐãÖ±²¥ and the USGS Land Change ¾ÅÐãÖ±²¥ Program.
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