Hillslopes in Headwaters of Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau as Hotspots for
Subsurface Dissolved Organic Carbon Processing during Permafrost Thaw
Abstract
Climate warming has accelerated thawing of northern permafrost,
resulting in changes to the supply of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) to
inland waters with uncertain fate. Extensive surface – groundwater
interactions occur in alpine permafrost watersheds and likely influence
DOC processing differently than systems with limited interactions. Here,
we quantify and characterize DOC in waters collected from eight water
types sampled across a small (25 km2) alpine (elevation 2960 to 4820 m
a.s.l) watershed in the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau (QTP) containing
variably degraded permafrost. Three types of water (thermokarst ponds,
red mud gully and seepage-I) contained high DOC concentrations (5.2 to
22.6 mg/L, n=38), with C contributions predominantly from frozen soil
meltwater. Spatial patterns of DOC in stream (0.3 to 4.8 mg L-1, n=41),
and subsurface waters (0.4 to 3.8 mg/L, n=34), all contained frozen soil
meltwater C as constrained by δ18O and electrical conductivity,
reflecting surface – groundwater exchanges in the upper-, mid- and
lower stretches of the watershed. Further, patterns of increasing DOC
loss (ΔDOC) in subsurface waters with decreased proportions of
protein-like organic matter and SUVA254, suggest subsurface microbial
processing. Using previously established biodegradation DOC kinetics
(0.06 d-1) from the QTP, the groundwater transit time is estimated to be
between 6 and 20 days based on ΔDOC changes of 32% and 74% for July
and September, respectively. Mass balance of DOC inputs and export
fluxes demonstrate nearly half of all DOC was lost in this small
watershed, indicating hillslopes are hotspots for DOC processing, with
subsurface environments playing a key role.