Biogeochemical evolution of ponded meltwater in a High Arctic subglacial tunnel
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Published:2023-07-21
Issue:7
Volume:17
Page:2993-3012
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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:
Dubnick Ashley J., Spietz Rachel L., Danielson Brad D.ORCID, Skidmore Mark L.ORCID, Boyd Eric S., Burgess Dave, Dhoonmoon Charvanaa, Sharp Martin
Abstract
Abstract. Subglacial environments comprise ∼10 %
of Earth's land surface, host active microbial ecosystems, and are important
components of global biogeochemical cycles. However, the broadly
inaccessible nature of subglacial systems has left them vastly understudied,
and research to date has been limited to laboratory experiments or field
measurements using basal ice or subglacial water accessed through boreholes
or from the glacier margin. In this study, we extend our understanding of
subglacial biogeochemistry and microbiology to include observations of a
slushy pond of water that occupied a remnant meltwater channel beneath a
polythermal glacier in the Canadian High Arctic over winter. The hydraulics
and geochemistry of the system suggest that the pond water originated as
late-season, ice-marginal runoff with less than ∼15 %
solute contribution from subglacial sources. Over the 8 months of
persistent sub-zero regional temperatures, the pond gradually froze,
cryo-concentrating solutes in the residual water by up to 7 times.
Despite cryo-concentration and the likely influx of some subglacial solute,
the pond was depleted in only the most labile and biogeochemically relevant
compounds, including ammonium, phosphate, and dissolved organic matter,
including a potentially labile tyrosine-like component. DNA amplicon
sequencing revealed decreasing microbial diversity with distance into the
meltwater channel. The pond at the terminus of the channel hosted a
microbial community inherited from late-season meltwater, which was
dominated by only six taxa related to known psychrophilic and psychrotolerant
heterotrophs that have high metabolic diversity and broad habitat ranges.
Collectively, our findings suggest that generalist microbes from the
extraglacial or supraglacial environments can become established in
subglacial aquatic systems and deplete reservoirs of nutrients and dissolved
organic carbon over a period of months. These findings extend our
understanding of the microbial and biogeochemical evolution of subglacial
aquatic ecosystems and the extent of their habitability.
Funder
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada Natural Resources Canada National Aeronautics and Space Administration
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Water Science and Technology
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