Title: Vulnerability of frozen carbon
1Vulnerability of frozen carbon
- D.V. Khvorostyanov1,2, G. Krinner2, P. Ciais1,
- S.A. Zimov3
- 1Laboratoire des Sciences du Climat et
l'Environnement, - Gif-sur-Yvette, France
- 2Laboratoire de Glaciologie et Géophysique de
l'Environnement, - St Martin dHères, France
- 3Northeast Science Station, Cherskii, Russia
2Permafrost
3Permafrost melting
AnisimovNelson 1997
Oelke et al, GRL 2004 Active layer depth
increase 1980 2002
4NH Cryosols
7.8 mln km2 268 Gt (16 world soil organic C)
Soil C estimates top 1m only!
North America 3.6 mln km2 (46) 107 GtC
(40) Mean C content 31 kgC m-2
Eurasia 4.2 mln km2 (54) 162 GtC (60) Mean C
content 39 kgC m-2
Tarnocai et al, 2003
5Yedoma Ice Northeast Siberia
- 1-million km2 area of carbon-rich loess sediments
- Presumably 400 GtC at mean depth of 12 m and 33
kgC m-3 density
Alekseev et al, Soil Science Society of America
Journal (2003)
Zimov et al, Science 1997
6Temperature dependence of biomass decomposition
One question, two answers D.Powlson, Nature
2005
One C pool (GlardinaRyan 2000)
Three C pools (Knorr et al 2005)
7Atmospheric warming feedbacks
8Soil Model Processes
- Heat conduction with freezing/thawing
- Hydrology
- Soil carbon consumption
- Oxic decompostion
- Methanogenesis
- Methanotrophy
- Diffusion of O2 and CH4
- Transfer of gases due to pressure difference
- Methane ebullition
9Holocene configuration comparison with
observations
- Methane fluxes
- Cherskii, summer 2003
10One point in Siberia...
The region of interest is Northeast Siberia, but
- First we test the model sensitivity and study in
some detail the key processes providing the
feedback - These are local climate conditions that matter
for this part of the study - So we choose a point in the central southern
Siberia but with soil configuration of Yedoma Ice
11The surface forcing 1000 1000
Present-day climate
12Soil carbon balance
Indefinite integrals over time How much of the
soil carbon has been transformed in one of these
processes at a given time
13Some details
14Step forcing and soil response
- 3 types of simulations
- No oxygen limitation on the oxic decomposition
- Oxygen limitation, no methane
- Methanogenesis and methanotrophy included
15Step forcing and soil response
- Biomass decomposition and methanotrophy
- are accompanied by heat release to the soil
- occur without heat release
16Surface forcing 1000 125 1000
17Soil carbon consumption
18Model sensitivity analysis
19Sensitivity to respiration heat
- Threshold between 35 and 40 MJ kgC-1
- Very small changes in consumed C elsewhere
- Methane fraction grows very slightly
20Sensitivity analysis résumé
Control soil respiration and heat transfer
Control methanogenesis, methanotrophy
21Simulations for the Yedoma Ice region
About 2 GtC are consumed in the first 100 yrs, 4
GtC in 200 yrs
22Conclusions
- The model reasonably simulates methane fluxes on
seasonal timescales - The carbon consumption time scale is about a few
centuries in response to 2xCO2 forcing - Decomposition heat release can be essential for
the positive feedback between the global warming
and frozen soil response - Availability of oxygen, methanogenesis, and local
climate conditions determine its existence and
parameters - Model sensitivity is the largest with respect to
the parameters determining soil heating,
freezing/thawing, and respiration - About 4 GtC are released in the atmosphere as CO2
in the first 200 years after the rapid 2xCO2
warming