Soil organic carbon storage and soil properties for 50 soil profiles in the Lena River Delta including land form description and map


Autoria(s): Siewert, Matthias Benjamin; Hugelius, Gustaf; Heim, Birgit; Faucherre, Samuel
Cobertura

MEDIAN LATITUDE: 72.884502 * MEDIAN LONGITUDE: 126.358439 * SOUTH-BOUND LATITUDE: 72.283111 * WEST-BOUND LONGITUDE: 126.140933 * NORTH-BOUND LATITUDE: 73.400000 * EAST-BOUND LONGITUDE: 126.464315

Data(s)

09/07/2016

Resumo

To project the future development of the soil organic carbon (SOC) storage in permafrost environments, the spatial and vertical distribution of key soil properties and their landscape controls needs to be understood. This article reports findings from the Arctic Lena River Delta where we sampled 50 soil pedons. These were classified according to the U.S.D.A. Soil Taxonomy and fall mostly into the Gelisol soil order used for permafrost-affected soils. Soil profiles have been sampled for the active layer (mean depth 58±10 cm) and the upper permafrost to one meter depth. We analyze SOC stocks and key soil properties, i.e. C%, N%, C/N, bulk density, visible ice and water content. These are compared for different landscape groupings of pedons according to geomorphology, soil and land cover and for different vertical depth increments. High vertical resolution plots are used to understand soil development. These show that SOC storage can be highly variable with depth. We recommend the treatment of permafrost-affected soils according to subdivisions into: the surface organic layer, mineral subsoil in the active layer, organic enriched cryoturbated or buried horizons and the mineral subsoil in the permafrost. The major geomorphological units of a subregion of the Lena River Delta were mapped with a land form classification using a data-fusion approach of optical satellite imagery and digital elevation data to upscale SOC storage. Landscape mean SOC storage is estimated to 19.2±2.0 kg C/m**2. Our results show that the geomorphological setting explains more soil variability than soil taxonomy classes or vegetation cover. The soils from the oldest, Pleistocene aged, unit of the delta store the highest amount of SOC per m**2 followed by the Holocene river terrace. The Pleistocene terrace affected by thermal-degradation, the recent floodplain and bare alluvial sediments store considerably less SOC in descending order.

Formato

application/zip, 2 datasets

Identificador

https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.862961

doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.862961

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

PANGAEA

Relação

Documentation of landforms of the Lena Delta region (URI: hdl:10013/epic.48156.d001)

Map of locations (URI: hdl:10013/epic.48156.d003)

Direitos

CC-BY: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported

Access constraints: unrestricted

Fonte

Department of Physical Geography, University of Stockholm

Supplement to: Siewert, Matthias Benjamin; Hugelius, Gustaf; Heim, Birgit; Faucherre, Samuel (2016): Landscape controls and vertical variability of soil organic carbon storage in the Lena River Delta. CATENA, accepted

Palavras-Chave #Active layer thickness; after Schneider et al. (2009) - see "Related to:"; aggregated; C/N; Carbon, organic, per area; Carbon, total; Carbon/Nitrogen ratio; Changing Permafrost in the Arctic and its Global Effects in the 21st Century; Corg area; DBD; Density, dry bulk; Depth in soil: 0-100 cm; Depth in soil: 0-30 cm; Drainage; Event; Ice; Ice content; Land cover classes; Landform; Layer thickness; LCC; Nitrogen, total; of patterned ground; Organic layer thickness; PAGE21; Soil great gr.; Soil great group; Soil order; Soil organic carbon in active layer; Soil organic carbon in cryoturbated and buried layers; Soil organic carbon in organic layer; Soil organic carbon in permafrost; Soil suborder; TC; Thickness; TN; Type; Uniform resource locator/link to raw data file; URL raw; USDA soil taxonomy; Visible; Water content of dry mass; Water dm
Tipo

Dataset