The Permafrost Tunnel north of Fairbanks, Alaska, was
dug in the 1960s and is run by the U.S. Army’s Cold Regions Research and
Engineering Laboratory. It is the site of much research into permafrost —
ground that stays frozen throughout the year, for multiple years.
NASA/Kate Ramsayer
Earth’s far northern reaches have locked carbon underground for millennia.
New research paints a picture of a landscape in change.
A new study, co-authored by NASA
scientists, details where and how greenhouse gases are escaping from the
Earth’s vast northern permafrost region as the Arctic warms. The frozen soils
encircling the Arctic from Alaska to Canada to Siberia store twice as much
carbon as currently resides in the atmosphere — hundreds of billions of tons —
and most of it has been buried for centuries.
An international team, led by researchers at Stockholm University, found that from 2000 to 2020, carbon dioxide uptake by the land was largely offset by emissions from it. Overall, they concluded that the region has been a net contributor to global warming in recent decades in large part because of another greenhouse gas, methane, that is shorter-lived but traps significantly more heat per molecule than carbon dioxide.
Greenhouse gases shroud the globe in this animation
showing data from 2021. Carbon dioxide is shown in orange; methane is shown in
purple. Methane traps heat 28 times more effectively than carbon dioxide over a
100-year timescale. Wetlands are a significant source of such emissions.
NASA’s Scientific Visualization Studio
The findings reveal a landscape in flux, said Abhishek Chatterjee, a
co-author and scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern
California. “We know that the permafrost region has captured and stored carbon
for tens of thousands of years,” he said. “But what we are finding now is that
climate-driven changes are tipping the balance toward permafrost being a net
source of greenhouse gas emissions.”
Carbon
Stockpile
Permafrost is ground that has been
permanently frozen for anywhere from two years to hundreds of thousands of
years. A core of it reveals thick layers of icy soils enriched with dead plant
and animal matter that can be dated using radiocarbon and other techniques.
When permafrost thaws and decomposes, microbes feed on this organic carbon,
releasing some of it as greenhouse gases.
Unlocking a fraction of the carbon
stored in permafrost could further fuel climate change. Temperatures in the Arctic are already warming two to
four times faster than the global average, and scientists are learning how
thawing permafrost is shifting the region from being a net sink for greenhouse gases to becoming a
net source of warming.
They’ve tracked emissions using ground-based instruments, aircraft, and satellites. One such campaign, NASA’s Arctic-Boreal Vulnerability Experiment (ABoVE), is focused on Alaska and western Canada. Yet locating and measuring emissions across the far northern fringes of Earth remains challenging. One obstacle is the vast scale and diversity of the environment, composed of evergreen forests, sprawling tundra, and waterways.
This map, based on data provided by the National Snow
and Ice Data Center, shows the extent of Arctic permafrost. The amount of
permafrost underlying the surface ranges from continuous — in the coldest areas
— to more isolated and sporadic patches.
NASA Earth Observatory
Cracks in the Sink
The new study was undertaken as
part of the Global
Carbon Project’s RECCAP-2 effort, which brings together different science teams, tools, and
datasets to assess regional carbon balances every few years. The authors followed the trail
of three greenhouse gases — carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide — across
7 million square miles (18 million square kilometers) of permafrost terrain
from 2000 to 2020.
Researchers found the region,
especially the forests, took up a fraction more carbon dioxide than it
released. This uptake was largely offset by carbon dioxide emitted from lakes
and rivers, as well as from fires that burned both forest and tundra.
They also found that the region’s
lakes and wetlands were strong sources of methane during those two decades.
Their waterlogged soils are low in oxygen while containing large volumes of
dead vegetation and animal matter — ripe conditions for hungry microbes.
Compared to carbon dioxide, methane can drive significant climate warming in
short timescales before breaking down relatively quickly. Methane’s lifespan in
the atmosphere is about 10 years, whereas carbon dioxide can last hundreds of
years.
The findings suggest the net change
in greenhouse gases helped warm the planet over the 20-year period. But over a
100-year period, emissions and absorptions would mostly cancel each other out.
In other words, the region teeters from carbon source to weak sink. The authors
noted that events such as extreme wildfires and heat waves are major sources of uncertainty when projecting into
the future.
Bottom Up, Top
Down
The scientists used two
main strategies to tally greenhouse gas emissions from the region. “Bottom-up”
methods estimate emissions from ground- and air-based measurements and
ecosystem models. Top-down methods use atmospheric measurements taken directly
from satellite sensors, including those on NASA’s Orbiting Carbon Observatory-2
(OCO-2) and JAXA’s (Japan Aerospace Exploration
Agency)Greenhouse Gases Observing Satellite.
Regarding near-term, 20-year, global warming potential, both scientific approaches aligned on the big
picture but differed in magnitude: The bottom-up calculations indicated
significantly more warming.
“This study is one of the first where we are able to integrate different methods and datasets to put together this very comprehensive greenhouse gas budget into one report,” Chatterjee said. “It reveals a very complex picture.”
By: Jet Propulsion
Laboratory
Source: NASA Helps Find Thawing Permafrost Adds to Near-Term Global Warming - NASA
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