Fuente: Science News
  Expuesto el: miércoles, 06 de junio de 2012 15:02
  Autor: Science News
  Asunto: Arctic's wintry blanket can be warming
| Forest snows keep    northern soils relatively toasty, diminishing how much climate-warming carbon    they can sequester Web    edition :    10:01 am 
 Arctic winters may be    snowy and cold, but a deep blanket of snow can actually keep the soil surface    fairly warm, a new study finds — at least in taiga, the conifer forests that may    constitute almost half of the Arctic’s land cover. Temperature plays a major    role in determining not only plants’ uptake of climate-warming carbon, but    also the soil’s potential for storing the element. Scientists who develop    computer programs to evaluate climate under changing conditions know this.    Yet for convenience, their simulations have largely treated Arctic snows as    if they blanket forest-free tundra, notes climate modeler Isabelle Gouttevin    of the CNRS/University Joseph Fourier-Grenoble in France. Her team has now    quantified the impact of ignoring the taiga snows’ insulating capacity in    climate simulations, and found that the oversight may make a substantial    difference. At a depth of 50 centimeters, soil in wintry taiga can be 12    degrees Celsius warmer than computer simulations predict when all    snow-covered Arctic terrain is treated like tundra, the researchers conclude    June 2 in the Journal of    Geophysical Research. Gouttevin’s team also finds that    because forested soils heat up from a warmer baseline in spring, their summer    temperature at 50 centimeters depth could be 4 degrees Celsius warmer than    all-tundra simulations had assumed.  Blustery winter winds    sweeping across the relatively flat tundra compact the snow’s crust,    eventually diminishing the whole blanket’s insulating capacity. The taiga’s    tree canopy protects the surface, allowing winter snows to remain fairly airy    and insulating. This means some taiga soil surfaces can remain around the    freezing point all winter, regardless of how low air temperatures plummet.    Gouttevin’s team confirmed such details in late winter at tundra field sites    in Alaska and taiga locations in Finland. Accounting for taiga’s    insulating snows decreases the amount of carbon that Arctic soils can hold by    some 64 billion metric tons, the scientists estimate. Soil warming associated    with taiga snows throughout the Arctic also could annually increase by 22    percent the activity of microbes that release carbon-based greenhouses gases    into the atmosphere. After accounting for the    greater insulating effect of forest covered Arctic snow, “there is a slight    shift in the carbon cycle,” Gouttevin says, “towards less carbon storage by    vegetation. This was quite a surprise.” Accounting for the higher    insulating value of taiga snow leads to such a dramatic shift in soil    warming, “that decomposition of soil organic matter (greenhouse gas    production) and permafrost thawing would be significantly greater at the    global scale,” says forest ecologist Glenn Juday of the University of Alaska    Fairbanks. “What elevates this result from the mundane story of another    [computer] model with another parameter that needs fixing,” he adds, “is the    huge pool of carbon stored in cold or frozen soils in the north — more than    the atmosphere and land plants combined.” 
 
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