Hydrology Controls Dissolved Organic Carbon and Nitrogen Export and Post‐Storm Recovery in Two Arctic Headwaters

Author:

Shogren Arial J.12ORCID,Zarnetske Jay P.2ORCID,Abbott Benjamin W.3ORCID,Grose Amelia L.2,Rec Abigail F.4,Nipko Jansen3,Song Chao25ORCID,O’Donnell Jonathan A.6ORCID,Bowden William B.4

Affiliation:

1. Biological Sciences Department The University of Alabama Tuscaloosa AL USA

2. Michigan State University Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences East Lansing MI USA

3. Department of Plant and Wildlife Sciences Brigham Young University Provo UT USA

4. Rubenstein School of the Environment and Natural Resources University of Vermont Burlington VT USA

5. State Key Laboratory of Herbage Improvement and Grassland Agro‐ecosystems and College of Ecology Lanzhou University Lanzhou China

6. National Parks Service Arctic Network Anchorage AK USA

Abstract

AbstractClimate change is rapidly altering hydrological processes and consequently the structure and functioning of Arctic ecosystems. Predicting how these alterations will shape biogeochemical responses in rivers remains a major challenge. We measured [C]arbon and [N]itrogen concentrations continuously from two Arctic watersheds capturing a wide range of flow conditions to assess understudied event‐scale C and N concentration‐discharge (C‐Q) behavior and post‐event recovery of stoichiometric conditions. The watersheds represent low‐gradient, tundra landscapes typical of the eastern Brooks Range on the North Slope of Alaska and are part of the Arctic Long‐Term Ecological Research sites: the Kuparuk River and Oksrukuyik Creek. In both watersheds, we deployed high‐frequency optical sensors to measure dissolved organic carbon (DOC), nitrate (), and total dissolved nitrogen (TDN) for five consecutive thaw seasons (2017–2021). Our analyses revealed a lag in DOC: stoichiometric recovery after a hydrologic perturbation: while DOC was consistently elevated after high flows, diluted during rainfall events and consequently, recovery in post‐event concentration was delayed. Conversely, the co‐enrichment of TDN at high flows, even in watersheds with relatively high N‐demand, represents a potential “leak” of hydrologically available organic N to downstream ecosystems. Our use of high‐frequency, long‐term optical sensors provides an improved method to estimate carbon and nutrient budgets and stoichiometric recovery behavior across event and seasonal timescales, enabling new insights and conceptualizations of a changing Arctic, such as assessing ecosystem disturbance and recovery across multiple timescales.

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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