Temperature and Flow Control Organic Carbon Metabolism in Boreal
Headwater Streams
Abstract
Carbon (C) emissions from headwater streams are derived from both
terrestrial inputs and in-stream metabolism of organic C (OC), but the
role of metabolism in boreal stream C fluxes remains uncertain.
Determining the factors that regulate OC metabolism will help predict
how the C balance of boreal streams will respond to future environmental
change. In this study, we addressed the question: what controls OC
metabolism in boreal headwater streams draining catchments with
discontinuous permafrost? We hypothesized that metabolism is
collectively regulated by OC reactivity, phosphorus availability, and
temperature, with discharge modulating each of these conditions. We
tested these hypotheses using a combination of laboratory experiments
and whole-stream ecosystem metabolism measurements throughout the
Caribou-Poker Creeks Research Watershed (CPCRW) in Interior Alaska, USA.
In the laboratory experiments, respiration and dissolved organic carbon
(DOC) removal were both co-limited by the supply of reactive C and
phosphorus, but temperature and residence time acted as stronger
controls of DOC removal. Ecosystem respiration (ER) was largely
predicted by discharge and site, with some variance explained by gross
primary production (GPP) and temperature. Both ER and GPP varied
inversely with watershed permafrost extent, with an inverse relationship
between temperature and permafrost extent providing the most plausible
explanation. Our results provide some of the first evidence of a
functional response to permafrost thaw in stream ecosystems and suggest
that the contribution of metabolism to stream C emissions may increase
as climate change progresses.