Environmental controls on observed spatial variability of soil pore water geochemistry in small headwater catchments underlain with permafrost
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Published:2023-09-14
Issue:9
Volume:17
Page:3987-4006
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ISSN:1994-0424
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Container-title:The Cryosphere
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language:en
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Short-container-title:The Cryosphere
Author:
Conroy Nathan AlecORCID, Heikoop Jeffrey M., Lathrop Emma, Musa Dea, Newman Brent D., Xu Chonggang, McCaully Rachael E., Arendt Carli A.ORCID, Salmon Verity G.ORCID, Breen Amy, Romanovsky VladimirORCID, Bennett Katrina E.ORCID, Wilson Cathy J.ORCID, Wullschleger Stan D.
Abstract
Abstract. Soil pore water (SPW) chemistry can vary substantially across
multiple scales in Arctic permafrost landscapes. The magnitude of these
variations and their relationship to scale are critical considerations for
understanding current controls on geochemical cycling and for predicting
future changes. These aspects are especially important for Arctic change
modeling where accurate representation of sub-grid variability may be
necessary to predict watershed-scale behaviors. Our research goal is to
characterize intra- and inter-watershed soil water geochemical variations at
two contrasting locations in the Seward Peninsula of Alaska, USA. We then
attempt to identify the key factors controlling concentrations of important
pore water solutes in these systems. The SPW geochemistry of 18 locations
spanning two small Arctic catchments was examined for spatial variability
and its dominant environmental controls. The primary environmental controls
considered were vegetation, soil moisture and/or redox condition, water–soil
interactions and hydrologic transport, and mineral solubility. The sampling
locations varied in terms of vegetation type and canopy height, presence or
absence of near-surface permafrost, soil moisture, and hillslope position.
Vegetation was found to have a significant impact on SPW NO3-
concentrations, associated with the localized presence of nitrogen-fixing
alders and mineralization and nitrification of leaf litter from tall willow
shrubs. The elevated NO3- concentrations were, however, frequently
equipoised by increased microbial denitrification in regions with sufficient
moisture to support it. Vegetation also had an observable impact on soil-moisture-sensitive constituents, but the effect was less significant. The
redox conditions in both catchments were generally limited by Fe reduction,
seemingly well-buffered by a cache of amorphous Fe hydroxides, with the most
reducing conditions found at sampling locations with the highest soil
moisture content. Non-redox-sensitive cations were affected by a wide
variety of water–soil interactions that affect mineral solubility and
transport. Identification of the dominant controls on current SPW
hydrogeochemistry allows for qualitative prediction of future geochemical
trends in small Arctic catchments that are likely to experience warming and
permafrost thaw. As source areas for geochemical fluxes to the broader
Arctic hydrologic system, geochemical processes occurring in these
environments are particularly important to understand and predict with
regards to such environmental changes.
Funder
Biological and Environmental Research
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Water Science and Technology
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