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(2009) Soil organic carbon stocks in the northern circumpolar permafrost region

Authors
Tarnocai C. , Canadell J. , Schuur E.A.G. , Kuhry P. , Mazhitova G. , Zimov S.A.
Source
Global Biogeochemical Cycles (25)
Type
P - Paper (2851)
Peer Review
1 - High (2301)
Audience
S - Specialist (3514)
Journal Number
23
Notes

Abstract

The Northern Circumpolar Soil Carbon Database was developed in order to determine carbon pools in soils of the northern circumpolar permafrost region. The area of all soils in the northern permafrost region is approximately 18,782  103 km2, or approximately 16% of the global soil area. In the northern permafrost region, organic soils (peatlands) and cryoturbated permafrost-affected mineral soils have the highest mean soil organic carbon contents (32.2–69.6 kg m2). Here we report a new estimate of
the carbon pools in soils of the northern permafrost region, including deeper layers and pools not accounted for in previous analyses. Carbon pools were estimated to be 191.29 Pg for the 0–30 cm depth, 495.80 Pg for the 0–100 cm depth, and 1024.00 Pg for
the 0–300 cm depth. Our estimate for the first meter of soil alone is about double that reported for this region in previous analyses. Carbon pools in layers deeper than 300 cm were estimated to be 407 Pg in yedoma deposits and 241 Pg in deltaic deposits. In
total, the northern permafrost region contains approximately 1672 Pg of organic carbon, of which approximately 1466 Pg, or 88%, occurs in perennially frozen soils and deposits. This 1672 Pg of organic carbon would account for approximately 50% of the
estimated global belowground organic carbon pool.

World_link Resources online

Folder Categories
Carbon Dioxide Soil and Vegetation Greenhouse Gas Sources and Sinks Permafrost
 
Tag_blue Keywords
soil carbon storage permafrost regions
 
 
Map Regions
Arctic
 

Entered by: Shaan Sahonta, 8/2010

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