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1 e resulting in degradation of the underlying permafrost.
2 stem characteristics which otherwise protect permafrost.
3 a high vulnerability of C in Tibetan upland permafrost.
4 ect the onset of carbon release from thawing permafrost.
5 f carbon and nitrogen release from degrading permafrost.
6 tored Hg from thawing sea-ice, glaciers, and permafrost.
7 trategies for potentially active microbes in permafrost.
8 temperatures and thawing of the near surface permafrost.
9 m, the latter one isolated from 30,000-y-old permafrost.
10 rom sites without permafrost than sites with permafrost.
11 ice will accelerate the thawing of Siberian permafrost.
12 millennia-old soils that extend into thawing permafrost.
13 the release of pre-aged carbon from thawing permafrost.
14 e sheet cover, lower sea level and extensive permafrost.
15 , using precipitation isotopes in syngenetic permafrost.
16 tion lobes are associated with discontinuous permafrost.
17 ineral horizons in palsa underlain by intact permafrost (41.8 +/- 10.8 mg carbon per g soil, 9.9 to 1
19 y remains on the postthaw carbon dynamics of permafrost-affected ecosystems, in particular since most
20 rients are increasing in virtually all large permafrost-affected rivers, indicating major shifts in A
24 change through carbon releases from thawing permafrost and higher solar absorption from reductions i
25 through thermal perturbation of near surface permafrost and increased mobility of previously frozen s
30 carbon reservoirs (marine methane hydrates, permafrost and methane trapped under ice) to 19 per cent
32 ate warming is expected to mobilize northern permafrost and peat organic carbon (PP-C), yet magnitude
33 first metagenomic interrogation of Antarctic permafrost and polar cryptoendolithic microbial communit
34 erstanding of the decomposability of thawing permafrost and relevant mechanistic controls over C rele
35 the early Holocene, associated with melting permafrost and retreating glaciers, while lowest burial
36 reas at Point Barrow, a site with continuous permafrost and small tidal amplitudes, fluxes are mostly
38 luding aspects of the hydrology, vegetation, permafrost, and glaciers, but effects on wildlife have b
39 rap organic carbon in soils overlying intact permafrost, and may limit carbon mobilization and degrad
40 t changes in the ocean, sea ice, snow cover, permafrost, and terrestrial biosphere that arise after a
41 th heavy precipitation events and thawing of permafrost are increasing the net transfer of terrestria
44 DNA has so far limited its recovery-outside permafrost areas-to specimens that are not older than ap
45 ilization may be of increasing importance in permafrost as the thawed surface region ("active layer")
46 The growth of the speleothems indicates that permafrost at the cave site was absent at that time, bec
48 locations such as deep-sea sediments and the permafrost based on demanding conditions of high pressur
49 sted permafrost plateaus (forest) and thawed permafrost bogs, ranging in thaw age from young (<10 yea
52 that the loss of sporadic and discontinuous permafrost by 2100 could result in a loss of up to 24 Pg
59 atmospheric records and models, suggest that permafrost carbon (PF-C) accumulated during the last gla
60 oss rates are among the highest reported for permafrost carbon and demonstrate the potential importan
63 rtant than modern climate in shaping current permafrost carbon distribution, and its importance incre
66 ving the rapid metabolism of Pleistocene-age permafrost carbon upon thaw and the outgassing of CO2 to
69 t systems, soil cores spanning a Pleistocene permafrost chronosequence (19,000, 27,000, and 36,000 ye
72 in central Alaska for centuries, as thawing permafrost collapses forests that transition to wetlands
75 from melting snow and ice as well as thawing permafrost, contrasting earlier notions of limited shrub
77 lly frozen soil in high latitude ecosystems (permafrost) currently stores 1330-1580 Pg of carbon (C).
79 predict future impacts of climate warming on permafrost degradation and subsequent feedback to climat
80 -latitude warming is capable of accelerating permafrost degradation and the decomposition of previous
81 d carbon storage in trees of 13.4 Pg C, with permafrost degradation being the most important factor.
82 these findings document a mechanism whereby permafrost degradation can lead to local decreases in tu
83 n Arctic polygon tundra, across a wet-to-dry permafrost degradation gradient from low-centered (intac
84 olygon centers, rims, and troughs) along the permafrost degradation gradient, we measured surface CH4
85 Knowing the rate and mechanisms of subsea permafrost degradation is a prerequisite to meaningful p
87 how three factors that alter N availability-permafrost degradation, atmospheric N deposition, and th
88 s into smaller volumes; and (ii) accelerated permafrost degradation, which enhances sublacustrine dra
90 C compounds) and normalized CO2-C release in permafrost deposits were similar or even higher than tho
91 hizal fungi could facilitate plant access to permafrost-derived N, their exploration capacity beyond
92 ism for the vertical redistribution of deep, permafrost-derived nutrients, which may alleviate N limi
94 land Ice Sheet and reductions in sea ice and permafrost distribution are likely to alter coastal morp
99 tation types when modeling CH4 production in permafrost ecosystems and suggests the need for longer-t
103 erability and resilience of lowland ice-rich permafrost ecosystems to climate changes depend on fores
105 g minerals as terminal electron acceptors in permafrost environments, and thus their stability and ca
106 phases associated with OM throughout diverse permafrost environments, suggesting that organomineral c
108 lly induced permafrost thaw at the Carbon in Permafrost Experimental Heating Research (CiPEHR) projec
110 potential future releases of Hg from thawing permafrost for low and high greenhouse gas emissions sce
111 njection flue gas into hydrate reservoirs in permafrost for methane recovery and geological capture a
114 In this study, injection of flue gas into permafrost gas hydrates reservoirs has been studied in o
115 the process whereby the thawing of ice-rich permafrost ground causes land subsidence, resulting in d
116 trogen (DOC and DON) concentrations in supra-permafrost groundwater (SPGW) near the land-sea interfac
117 n and release of methane (CH4 ) from thawing permafrost has the potential to be a strong source of ra
118 00, the high emissions scenario shows annual permafrost Hg emissions to the atmosphere comparable to
126 specimen YG 648.1) was discovered in thawing permafrost in the Klondike goldfields, near Dawson City,
127 e scientific re-drilling to show that subsea permafrost in the near-shore zone of the ESAS has a down
129 he sensitivity of permanently frozen ground (permafrost) in the Northern Hemisphere to warming is les
131 osystems warm, the thaw and decomposition of permafrost is expected to release large amounts of C to
133 Release of greenhouse gases from thawing permafrost is potentially the largest terrestrial feedba
134 use palaeoclimate data to show that Siberian permafrost is robust to warming when Arctic sea ice is p
135 Across the Arctic, glaciers are melting and permafrost is thawing at unprecedented rates, releasing
137 veal that inland water carbon emissions from permafrost landscapes may be more sensitive to changes i
140 ining the shallow organic mat and the deeper permafrost layer of arctic soils to complete and partial
141 ons might enhance heat transport into deeper permafrost layers promoting permafrost thawing, thereby
142 es retain their infectivity in prehistorical permafrost layers should be of concern in a context of g
143 are expected to rise in the future, ice-rich permafrost may thaw, altering soil topography and hydrol
144 hensive estimates of OC stocks across alpine permafrost means that current knowledge on this issue re
145 d mercury from melting polar ice and thawing permafrost; new funding schemes and regulations; and lan
147 gies, substantial uncertainties exist in the permafrost OC budget, which limits our understanding of
149 ated the pool size and spatial variations of permafrost OC stock to 3 m depth on the Tibetan Plateau
151 = 10(6) tons) of methane from thawing subsea permafrost on shallow continental shelves and dissociati
157 d therefore provide an incomplete picture of permafrost peatland response to recent rapid warming.
160 that DOM originating from previously frozen permafrost peatlands is highly aromatic and previously p
162 om bare peat surfaces, a typical landform in permafrost peatlands, where permafrost thaw caused a fiv
165 ezes annually) was nearly four times that of permafrost per gram soil carbon, and CH4 production per
166 illennia, related to the combined effects of permafrost persistence, distant glacial refugia and fire
167 spruce) associated with location on elevated permafrost plateau and across multiple time periods (194
168 nce approach to measure C stocks in forested permafrost plateaus (forest) and thawed permafrost bogs,
170 using a carbon-nitrogen model that includes permafrost processes forced in an unmitigated warming sc
172 juarapik-Whapmagoostui, QC) and a continuous permafrost region in the Arctic tundra (Bylot Island, NU
173 y investigated thaw ponds in a discontinuous permafrost region in the Subarctic taiga (Kuujjuarapik-W
174 nario, that the future carbon balance of the permafrost region is highly sensitive to the decomposabi
176 boreal and tundra soils from the geographic permafrost region to evaluate large-scale controls of an
177 size data from 1114 sites across the Tibetan permafrost region to report that paleoclimate is more im
178 on (C) is stored in the northern circumpolar permafrost region, where air temperatures are increasing
179 d to cover approximately 20% of the northern permafrost region, with approximately equal contribution
184 afrost to evaluate temperature change across permafrost regions for the period since the Internationa
187 e located at the southern edge of continuous permafrost reveals periods in which the overlying ground
190 epresenting different states of thaw: intact permafrost, seasonally thawed active layer and thermokar
192 y, and greater CH4 oxidation than did intact permafrost sites, to a greater degree than soil moisture
193 were consequently very low, but erosion and permafrost slumping downstream of the lake increased riv
196 nditions under extreme cold and dryness: the permafrost soil which is enriched in traits which emphas
198 l gene composition of microorganisms in some permafrost soils and a rapid shift in functional gene co
199 assays to examine the functional capacity of permafrost soils and cryptoendolithic communities in Uni
201 half-century, and much of these carbon-rich permafrost soils are now within ~0.5 degrees C of thawin
205 carbon budgets in the Arctic, where thawing permafrost soils increase opportunities for DOC oxidatio
211 te-Pleistocene) carbon released from thawing permafrost soils, but the magnitude of these source cont
212 al warming has led to the thawing of ancient permafrost soils, particularly in Arctic regions, due to
213 cient DNA (aDNA) from lake sediments, peats, permafrost soils, preserved megafaunal gut contents and
217 Our results also demonstrated that Tibetan permafrost stored a large amount of OC in the top 3 m, w
220 nvolved in organomineral complexation within permafrost systems, soil cores spanning a Pleistocene pe
222 AS has a downward movement of the ice-bonded permafrost table of approximately 14 cm year(-1) over th
226 res may induce widespread thaw subsidence of permafrost terrain in the first seven years following th
228 by Ob and Yenisey aligns with discontinuous permafrost that facilitates leaching, whereas higher par
230 ially large CO2 sources associated with deep permafrost thaw and cold season respiration expected ove
232 g positive relationship between the depth of permafrost thaw and N availability in tundra ecosystems
234 Arctic warming is promoting terrestrial permafrost thaw and shifting hydrologic flowpaths, leadi
235 cted to hinge more on the rate and extent of permafrost thaw and soil decomposition than on enhanced
236 ing during 5 years of experimentally induced permafrost thaw at the Carbon in Permafrost Experimental
239 ical landform in permafrost peatlands, where permafrost thaw caused a fivefold increase in emissions
241 onally, analysis of the labeled fractionated permafrost thaw DOM directly showed carboxyl-rich alicyc
242 ease global greenhouse gas concentrations as permafrost thaw exposes immense stores of frozen carbon
245 of forest change in a landscape subjected to permafrost thaw in unburned dominant forest types (paper
246 major positive feedback to climate change if permafrost thaw increases heterotrophic decomposition.
247 freshwaters, which is likely to increase as permafrost thaw intensifies causing positive climate fee
250 ial communities and functional genes along a permafrost thaw sequence (1, 10, and 16 years since perm
251 ty of three sites representative of distinct permafrost thaw stages at a palsa mire in northern Swede
252 ired two and seven years post-fire, detected permafrost thaw subsidence across 34% of the burned tund
255 nt carbon (11,300 to >50,000 (14)C years) in permafrost thaw waters and millennial-aged carbon (up to
256 ing about the impacts of thermokarst (abrupt permafrost thaw) on microbial structure and function rem
261 occurred below the maximum rooting depth in permafrost thaw-front soil in tussock and shrub tundra c
274 ienced a rapid shift to wetter conditions as permafrost thawed in response to climatic warming, culmi
276 eous carbon release from Arctic soils due to permafrost thawing is known to be substantial, but growi
278 e carbon pool size together with significant permafrost thawing suggests a risk of carbon emissions a
279 port into deeper permafrost layers promoting permafrost thawing, thereby enhancing groundwater discha
282 shwater and nutrients to the Arctic Ocean as permafrost thaws, yet few studies have quantified ground
285 ries from the Global Terrestrial Network for Permafrost to evaluate temperature change across permafr
286 52 years of sublimation measurements from a permafrost tunnel near Fairbanks, Alaska, and constrain
287 sea ice is present, as well as the increased permafrost vulnerability when sea ice is absent, can be
291 Alaska during the last glacial period, when permafrost was absent, allowing water infiltration into
292 cover all horizons of active layer and upper permafrost, we found that an increased availability of p
295 n atmospheric release of carbon from thawing permafrost, yet overlooked waterborne release pathways l
297 h of zero annual amplitude in the continuous permafrost zone increased by 0.39 +/- 0.15 degrees C.