Plant community shifts as early indicators of abrupt permafrost thaw and
associated carbon release in an interior Alaskan peatland.
Abstract
Widespread changes to near-surface permafrost in northern ecosystems are
occurring through top-down thaw of near-surface permafrost and more
abrupt localized thermokarst. Both types of thaw are associated with a
loss of ecosystem services, including soil hydrothermal and mechanical
stability and long-term carbon storage. Here, we analyze relationships
between ground layer vegetation, active layer thickness, and greenhouse
gas fluxes along a thaw gradient from permafrost peat plateau to thaw
bog in Interior Alaska. We used active layer thickness to define four
distinct stages of thaw: Stable, Early, Intermediate, and Advanced, and
we identified key plant taxa that serve as reliable indicators of each
stage. Advanced thaw, with a thicker active layer and thermokarst, was
associated with increased abundance of graminoids and Sphagnum mosses
but decreased plant species richness and ericoid abundance. Early thaw,
driven by active layer thickening with little visible evidence of
thermokarst, coincided with a fivefold increase in CH4 emissions,
accounting for ~30% of the total increase in methane
emissions occurring in ~10% of the timeline of the
forest-to-bog transition. Our findings suggest that early stages of
thaw, prior to the formation of thermokarst features, are associated
with distinct vegetation and soil moisture changes that lead to abrupt
increases in methane emissions, which then are perpetuated through
ground collapse and collapse scar bog formation. Current modeling of
permafrost peatlands will underestimate carbon emissions from thawing
permafrost unless these linkages between plant community, nonlinear
active layer dynamics, and carbon fluxes of emerging thaw features are
integrated into modeling frameworks.