In this photo from February 2006, research team member Christian Trucco makes a wintertime measurement of ecosystem carbon flux in Eight Mile Lake near Denali National Park in Alaska. The black suitcase contains an infrared gas analyzer to measure carbon dioxide exchange between tundra and the air. When the small clear chambers are placed on the snow/tundra surface, the carbon dioxide in the chamber increases slowly over 10 minutes because of microbial release of carbon dioxide from decomposing soil organic matter. Even during the winter when the plants are not active, there is a slow release of carbon by microbes that is significant once it is added up over the long winter period. Credit: Emily Tissier/University of Florida. As the frozen soil in the Arctic thaws, bacteria will break down organic matter, releasing long-stored carbon into the warming atmosphere. At the same time, plants will proliferate, nurtured by balmier temperatures, more nutrients from decomposing soil and the increasing abundance of the greenhouse gas they depend on for growth. These connected but contrasting changes have raised a question for scientists who study the causes and consequences of global climate change: Will the shrubs and incipient forests spreading across the Arctic compensate for the permafrost’s rising release of carbon, blunting its impact on a warming planet? Or, with twice as much carbon locked up in the permafrost as now present in the atmosphere, will the lush growth become overwhelmed – like a kitchen sponge put down to stem a water main break? Researchers led by a University of Florida ecologist may have an answer. In a paper set to appear May 28 in the journal Nature, the team reports experimental results suggesting tundra plant growth may keep up with rising carbon dioxide initially. But if thawing continues in a warmer world, the permafrost will spew carbon for decades, and the plants will become overwhelmed – unable to sop up the excess carbon despite even the most vigorous growth. “At first, with the plants offsetting the carbon dioxide, it will appear that everything is fine, but actually this conceals the initial destabilization of permafrost carbon,” said Ted Schuur, a UF associate professor of ecology and lead author of the paper. “But it doesn’t last, because there is so much carbon in the permafrost that eventually the plants can’t keep up.” …

Greening Arctic Not Likely To Offset Permafrost Carbon Release