Coupling of Water‐Carbon Interactions During Snowmelt in an Arctic Finland Catchment

Author:

Croghan Danny1ORCID,Ala‐Aho Pertti1ORCID,Lohila Annalea23ORCID,Welker Jeffrey456,Vuorenmaa Jussi7,Kløve Bjørn1,Mustonen Kaisa‐Riikka4ORCID,Aurela Mika2,Marttila Hannu1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Water, Energy and Environmental Engineering Research Unit University of Oulu Oulu Finland

2. Finnish Meteorological Institute Oulu Finland

3. INAR Institute for Atmospheric and Earth System Research/Physics Faculty of Science University of Helsinki Helsinki Finland

4. Ecology and Genetics Research Unit University of Oulu Oulu Finland

5. Department of Biological Sciences University of Alaska Anchorage FI Oulu USA

6. UArctic Rovaniemi Finland

7. Finnish Environment Institute Helsinki Finland

Abstract

AbstractSnowmelt spring floods regulate carbon transport from land to streams. However, these coupled processes are rarely documented through high‐resolution measurements focused on water‐carbon interactions. We collated a state‐of‐the‐art high‐frequency data set throughout a snowmelt and early post snowmelt period, alongside regular samples of stream water, precipitation, and snowmelt isotopes (δ18O). Our study was conducted during the 2019 snowmelt and initial post snowmelt season in a subarctic, peatland influenced headwater catchment in Pallas, Northern Finland. We measured high‐frequency dissolved organic carbon (DOC), and in‐stream carbon dioxide (pCO2). We identified a change in hydrological processes as the snowmelt season progressed and the post snowmelt season began. We found (a) Overland flow dominated stream DOC dynamics in early snowmelt, while increased catchment connectivity opened new distal pathways in the later snowmelt period; (b) CO2 processes were initially driven by rapid bursts of CO2 from the meltwaters in snowmelt, followed by dilution and source limitation emerging post snowmelt as deep soil pathways replaced the snowpack as the main source of CO2; (c) stream carbon concentration shifted from being relatively balanced between CO2 and DOC during the early snowmelt period to being increasingly DOC dominated as snowmelt progressed due to changes in DOC and CO2 source supply. The study highlights the importance of using high‐frequency measurements combined with high‐frequency data analyses to identify changes in the processes driving water‐carbon interactions. The degree to which water‐carbon interactions respond to the continuation of Arctic water cycle amplification is central to delineating the evolving complexity of the future Arctic.

Funder

Academy of Finland

Strategic Research Council

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Water Science and Technology

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