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Changes in methane flux along a permafrost thaw sequence on the Tibetan Plateau Guibiao Yang, Yunfeng Peng, David Olefeldt, Yongliang Chen, Guanqin Wang, Fei Li, Dianye Zhang, Jun Wang, Jianchun Yu, Li Liu, Shuqi Qin, Tianyang Sun, and Yuanhe Yang Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.7b04979 • Publication Date (Web): 25 Dec 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on December 25, 2017
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Changes in methane flux along a permafrost thaw sequence on the Tibetan
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Plateau
3 4
Guibiao Yang1,2, Yunfeng Peng1, David Olefeldt3, Yongliang Chen1, Guanqin Wang1,2,
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Fei Li1,2, Dianye Zhang1,2, Jun Wang1,2, Jianchun Yu1,2, Li Liu1,2, Shuqi Qin1,2,
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Tianyang Sun1,2, and Yuanhe Yang1,2*
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1.
State Key Laboratory of Vegetation and Environmental Change, Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100093, China
9 10
2.
University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China
11
3.
Department of Renewable Resources, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, T6G 2H1
12 13 14
*
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10-6283 6632, E-mail:
[email protected] Corresponding author: Dr. Yuanhe Yang, tel.: + 86 10-6283 6638, fax: + 86
16
1
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ABSTRACT: Permafrost thaw alters the physical and environmental conditions of
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soil and may thus cause a positive feedback to climate warming through increased
19
methane emissions. However, the current knowledge of methane emissions following
20
thermokarst development is primarily based on expanding lakes and wetlands, with
21
upland thermokarst being studied less often. In this study, we monitored the methane
22
emissions during the peak growing seasons of two consecutive years along a thaw
23
sequence within a thermo-erosion gully in a Tibetan swamp meadow. Both years had
24
consistent results, with the early and mid-thaw stages (3 to 12 years since thaw)
25
exhibiting low methane emissions that were similar to those in the undisturbed
26
meadow, while the emissions from the late thaw stage (20 years since thaw) were 3.5
27
times higher. Our results also showed that the soil water-filled pore space, rather than
28
the soil moisture per se, in combination with the sand content, were the main factors
29
that caused increased methane emissions. These findings differ from the traditional
30
view that upland thermokarst could reduce methane emissions owing to the
31
improvement of drainage conditions, suggesting that upland thermokarst development
32
does not always result in a decrease in methane emissions.
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TOC Art
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Keywords: carbon cycle, climate feedback, methane, methanogens, methanotrophs,
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permafrost, thermokarst.
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1. INTRODUCTION
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Permafrost ground in high altitude and high latitude regions contains more than half
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the global soil organic carbon (C)1,
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warming3-5. A warmer climate will cause widespread permafrost thaw, which can lead
41
to land surface collapse and erosion, i.e., thermokarst, in certain landscape settings6-8.
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Thermokarst often causes abrupt changes in soil environmental conditions and thus
43
strongly influences the production rates of microbial greenhouse gases, including both
44
carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane (CH4)9-14. Understanding the impacts of
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permafrost thaw on CH4 emissions is particularly critical, considering the 25 to
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30-fold greater warming potential of CH4 compared to CO2 over a 100-year horizon15.
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However, thermokarst is considered one of the key uncertainties in our understanding
48
of future CH4 emissions and the overall permafrost carbon feedback to climate
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change6, 10, 16.
2
and is considered vulnerable to climate
50 51
Thermokarst occurs due to the melting of excess ground ice7 and can cause the
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development of a large number of distinct landforms depending on the landscape
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characteristics and position. Broadly, these landforms have been grouped into wetland,
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lake, and upland thermokarst landforms17. Upland thermokarst often occurs in upland
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settings on moderate slopes or along watercourses and includes active layer
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detachment slides, retrogressive thaw slumps, and thermo-erosion gullies18-20. While
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several studies have reported increased CH4 emissions from recently formed wetland
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and lake thermokarst landforms21-24, less is known about the impact on CH4 emissions 4
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from upland thermokarst landforms. It has been reported that upland ecosystems with
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stable permafrost are most often minor CH4 sources or CH4 sinks
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improved water drainage26, 27 following the development of upland thermokarst would
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lead to further reduced CH4 emissions or an increased sink function16, 28, 29. However,
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a survey of 26 upland thermokarst landforms on the North Slope of Alaska found
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elevated CH4 concentrations in soil profiles compared to the nearby locations
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unaffected by thermokarst10. This finding implies that upland thermokarst may also
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cause increased CH4 emissions, but direct observations of increasing CH4 emissions
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following upland thermokarst are still lacking.
13, 21, 25
, and
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Upland thermokarst can lead to both land surface collapse and erosion, which together
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abruptly alters the physiochemical characteristics of the soil, and thus potentially
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affect the processes controlling CH4 production, transport, and oxidation4,
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Concurrent changes to several soil characteristics may have counteracting influences
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that need to be considered to understand the resulting net CH4 emissions. For example,
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while thermokarst-induced lower volumetric water content (VWC) in the soil may
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reduce CH4 flux, other factors could enhance CH4 emissions. For instance, soil
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collapse often increases soil bulk density by reducing soil porosity, which may
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increase soil water-filled porespace (WFPS) in the soil30,
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though soil compaction reduces the VWC, which has been linked to reduced CH4
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emissions11-13, the concurrent increase in the WFPS may cause increasing anaerobic
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conditions
that
are
beneficial
to
methanogens
and
10
.
31
. Consequently, even
adverse
for
aerobic 5
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methanotrophs32-34, increase CH4 production and inhibit aerobic CH4 oxidation35. At
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the same time, increases in both bulk density and WFPS increases the thermal
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conductivity of the soil36, which would lead to higher soil temperatures and thus
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stimulate microbial CH4 production. In addition, thermokarst may increase the sand
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content as a result of the water scouring action37, 38, which may retain less CH4 and
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increase the potential for the transport of CH4 from soils to the atmosphere39, 40.
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Increased sand content may also influence the net CH4 emissions following shifts in
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pH, since both methanogen and methanotroph activity increase as conditions go from
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acidic to neutral41, 42. However, it remains poorly understood about the factors that
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dominate the response of net CH4 emissions following thermokarst development,
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which is a prerequisite for predicting future CH4 emissions from permafrost regions.
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The Tibetan permafrost region represents approximately three quarters of the total
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alpine permafrost area in the Northern Hemisphere43, yet its vulnerability to climate
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change has attracted limited attention compared to the boreal and tundra permafrost
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regions1, 44-46. In this study, we conducted a two-year survey (2015 and 2016) of CH4
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emissions during the peak growing season in a thermo-erosion gully underlaid by
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discontinuous permafrost on the Tibetan Plateau. We also measured the biotic and
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abiotic parameters relevant to the processes of CH4 production and consumption.
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Structural equation modeling (SEM) was used to evaluate the relative importance of
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various pathways that regulate CH4 emissions. Overall, our current study aimed to 1)
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examine how the CH4 emissions during peak growing season change along a thaw 6
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sequence; and 2) disentangle the biotic and abiotic regulating pathways of net CH4
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emission pattern along the thaw sequence.
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2. MATERIALS AND METHODS
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2.1. Site description
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This study was conducted within the permafrost region of the northeastern Tibetan
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Plateau, China (N 37°28′, E 100°17′, altitude ~3900 m above sea level; Figure 1a).
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The study site is located on a hillslope with a gentle south-facing 9° incline. The mean
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annual temperature is -3.3 °C and the average annual precipitation is 460 mm. The
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vegetation type is swamp meadow dominated by Kobresia tibetica, K. royleana,
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Carex atrofuscoides, Saussurea pulchra Lipsch, Potentilla saundersiana Royle, etc.
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The soil has a silty loam texture with a high organic carbon content (19.4 ± 0.5%) and
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high-water content at a depth of 10 cm (seasonal mean VWC of 62.2 ± 4.4%
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measured in 2015). Average active layer thickness (ALT) was estimated to be 0.86 m
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based on the combination of GSSI georadar (SIR-20, Laurel, Santa Clara, USA) and
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thaw-probe measurements. The excess ground ice is classified as intrusive ice47.
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Permafrost thaw and surface subsidence have been documented at the site since the
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early 1990s and have led to the initiation and expansion of the thermo-erosional gully.
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The gully had been experiencing thermo-erosion processes and retreating forward and
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laterally along the slope. The gully is present ~240 m long, with a maximum depth of
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approximately 2 m. During the thawing season, a stream flows along the gully from
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the head to the bottom where it exits into a larger watercourse. 7
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Four 15 × 20 m2 plots were established in 2015. One plot, referred to as the control,
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was located away from the thermo-erosional gully and showed no evidence of surface
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subsidence due to permafrost thaw. Another three plots were located within the gully,
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and reflected different stages of thaw, with the specific age since thaw initiation
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estimated by two steps. We first estimated the rate of gully retreat (~8 m yr-1) by
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comparing to satellite images from 2007 to 2013 and ground measurements between
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2014 and 2016. We then determined the time since collapse for each thaw stage by
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dividing the distance between the gully head and each site by the rate of gully retreat,
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respectively. The early, mid- and late stage plots were thus estimated to have
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undergone surface collapse due to thaw 3, 12, and 20 years prior to the study,
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respectively (Figure 1c-f).
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2.2. CH4 flux measurements
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We measured the CH4 fluxes using the static chamber methodology48. Ten sampling
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locations were randomly selected within each of the four plots. A collar (diameter 26
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cm and height 12 cm) with an anchor ring was installed at each location to a depth of
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10 cm. The static chambers (25 cm tall) were made of PVC and were covered with
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insulation materials. A fan was installed on the top wall of each chamber to provide
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headspace mixing. Gas samples (50 ml) were taken from the headspace 0, 10, 20, 30
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and 40 min after chamber closure. The chamber was vented before it was moved to
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the next collar. During gas sampling, the soil temperature and VWC in the top 10 cm, 8
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as well as the ALT, were measured adjacent to each collar. To ensure that the
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measurements were not biased by differences in the microclimate over time, or by
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artificial and system errors, four people collected gas samples simultaneously in the
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four quadrats, and the people were rotated among the quadrats during gas collection.
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Gas samples were collected between 9 am and 12 noon in July and August of 2015
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(three times per month with 10-day intervals) and 2016 (once in early July, three
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times in a row at the end of July, and once at the end of August). Note that we
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conducted the gas measurements during three consecutive days near the end of July
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rather than at equal intervals in 2016, since we aimed to match the gas and soil
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samplings to better reveal the biotic and abiotic mechanisms regulating CH4 fluxes.
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All gas samples were analyzed for CH4 concentration on a gas chromatograph
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(Agilent 7890A, Agilent Technologies Inc., Santa Clara, California, USA). The CH4
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flux was then calculated according to Eq.148.
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V P T 0 dC F = ρ× × × × t A P0 T dt
(1)
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where F is the CH4 flux (mg m-2 h-1); ρ is the density of CH4 under standard
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conditions (mg m-3); V and A are the volume of the chamber (m3) and the base area
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(m2), respectively; P is the air pressure (hPa) and T is the air temperature (K). Po and
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To are the standard pressure (1013 hPa) and the standard temperature (273 K),
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respectively. dCt/dt is the growth rate of the CH4 concentration (10-6 h-1).
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2.3. Soil sampling and analyses
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Soil samples were collected from the upper 15 cm using a standard soil probe 9
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(inside-diameter 2.5 cm) at the end of July 2016 near each collar. The soil samples
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were sieved (2 mm), homogenized, and divided into two subsamples. One set of
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subsamples was immediately flash-frozen in liquid nitrogen and stored at -80° C for
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DNA extraction. The other set of subsamples was air-dried and used to determine soil
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pH and sand content. The soil pH was determined in a soil water suspension (1:5 dry
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soil to deionized water ratio) using a pH electrode (PB-10, Sartorius, Germany). The
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soil texture was measured using a particle size analyzer (Malvern Masterizer 2000,
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Malvern, Worcestershire, UK) after organic matter and carbonates were removed
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using 30% hydrogen peroxide and 30% hydrochloric acid, respectively49. The bulk
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density of each sample was obtained using a standard container with a fixed volume
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size of 100 cm3 and was then measured based on the dry soil weight after it was
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oven-dried at 105 °C for 24 h. The WFPS was determined according to Eq.2.
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W FPS = SW C × BD /(1-BD/PD )
(2)
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In the equation, WFPS and BD represent the soil water-filled pore space (%) and soil
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bulk density (g cm-3), respectively, while the soil water content (SWC) is calculated
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based on the oven-dry method (g g-1), and PD represents the particle density of the
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soil (2.65 g cm-3).
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2.4. DNA extraction and quantitative PCR analysis
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We quantified the abundance of CH4-related functional genes (mcrA and pmoA) to
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examine the effects of specific microorganisms on the CH4 fluxes. The abundance of
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the mcrA gene has been widely used to quantify methanogens34, 35, as it codes for a 10
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subunit of Methyl-coenzymeM reductase, which is a crucial enzyme in CH4
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production. Conversely, the abundance of the pmoA gene is used as an indicator of the
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abundance of methanotrophs32,
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monooxygenase, which is a key enzyme for CH4 oxidation. During the quantification
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process, the DNA was extracted from 0.4 g of soil preserved at -80 °C using a Power
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Soil® DNA Isolation Kit (MoBio Laboratories, Carlsbad, CA, USA) according to the
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manufacturer protocol. The quality of the DNA was assessed based on 260/280 nm
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and 260/230 nm absorbance values using a NanoDrop-2000 (Thermo Fisher Scientific,
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Madison, WI, USA). The abundances of the pmoA and mcrA genes were determined
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on a StepOne Plus real-time PCR system (Applied Biosystems, Inc., CA, USA). The
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20 µl reaction mixture contained 10 µl SYBR Premix Ex Taq (Tli RNaseH Plus), 0.4
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µl forward and reverse primers, 0.4 µl ROX Reference Dye (50×), 6.8 µl sterile water
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and 2 µl five-fold diluted template DNA. The thermal-cycling conditions, primer pairs,
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number of cycles and references used to quantify the abundances of the pmoA and
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mcrA genes were shown in SI Table S1. The standard curves were generated using
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ten-fold serial dilutions of purified plasmids containing the respective genes with r2 >
207
0.9. The copy numbers in the samples were calculated based on the comparison to the
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threshold cycle values of the standard curve, and were given in per gram soil (dry
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weight).
35
, as it codes for a subunit of methane
210 211
2.5. Statistical analyses
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The data were analyzed following three steps. First, a repeated-measures analysis of 11
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variance (ANOVA) with interactions was carried out with the thaw stage as the main
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(between-subject) factor and sampling date as the within-subject factor to assess the
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effect of the main factors on the CH4 fluxes during the peak growing seasons of 2015
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and 2016. One-way ANOVAs were used to determine the differences in the biotic
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factors (the mcrA and pmoA abundances) and abiotic factors (soil temperature, VWC,
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WFPS, ALT, pH, bulk density, and sand content) among the different thaw stages.
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Multi-comparison of Tukey's HSD was conducted to test whether each parameter
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exhibited significant differences among the thaw stages at the significance level of P
221
< 0.05.
222 223
Second, linear regressions were performed to explore the relationships of the CH4
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fluxes with the biotic and abiotic factors, in which we adopted the mean values of
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CH4 fluxes, soil temperature, VWC and ALT measured three times in a row at the end
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of July, and the abundances of the mcrA and pmoA genes, WFPS, pH, bulk density,
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and sand content in the soils collected during this time. The mean CH4 fluxes were
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log-transformed to achieve a normal distribution of the data to meet the assumptions
229
of the analysis. All abovementioned statistics were performed using SPSS 20.0 (IBM
230
SPSS, Chicago, IL, USA).
231 232
Third, structural equation modeling (SEM) was used to determine the major
233
controlling pathways regulating the CH4 fluxes along the thaw sequence. SEM is an
234
extension of traditional regression and pathway analyses that is used to model 12
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multivariate relations based on a collection of simultaneous procedures that determine
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the hypothetical pathways of direct and indirect influence among many variables
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using the covariance among those variables50, 51. A base model was established on the
238
basis of the current understanding of the key CH4 emission controls as described in
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the literature (SI Figure 1). In the base model, we assumed that: 1) methanogen
240
microbial abundance, as expressed by the mcrA gene, has a direct effect on the CH4
241
flux. By contrast, the CH4 oxidation process was not included in the model because no
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significant correlation was observed between the CH4 fluxes and the abundance of the
243
pmoA gene (Figure 4g). 2) Soil pH affects microbial growth and enzyme activities and
244
thus controls the CH4 emissions through both direct and indirect pathways via the
245
mcrA gene abundance. 3) Sand content, VWC and WFPS are linked to CH4 emissions
246
directly and indirectly through microbial abundance and pH. The model χ2 test and
247
root mean squared error approximation (RMSEA) value were used to evaluate the fit
248
of the final model. The model was considered to have a good fit when the χ2 test was
249
not significant (P>0.05) and the RMSEA was between 0 and 0.150. The coefficient of
250
each pathway was presented as a standardized coefficient in the final model, and was
251
determined using the analysis of the correlation matrices. The pathway coefficients
252
reflect how many standard deviations the effect variable would be changed when the
253
causal variable was changed by one standard deviation. SEM analyses were
254
conducted using AMOS 21.0 (Amos Development Corporation, Chicago, IL, USA).
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3. RESULTS 13
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3.1. Variability in CH4 emissions along the thaw sequence
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Our field observations showed that permafrost collapse had significant effects on CH4
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emissions (SI Table S2), with consistent trends along the permafrost thaw sequence
260
during the 2015 and 2016 peak growing season. In both years, significantly increased
261
CH4 emissions compared to the control were only observed at the late thaw stage,
262
where surface collapse due to permafrost thaw had occurred 20 years prior (Figure 2).
263 264
3.2 Effects of upland thermokarst on biophysical variables
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Thermokarst significantly altered the soil properties, including soil temperature, VWC,
266
WFPS, bulk density, sand content and pH (Table 1). Compared with the control, the
267
soil temperatures in the top 10 cm at the middle and late thaw stages were 0.4 and
268
0.6 °C higher, respectively. Both the VWC and WFPS were lower at the early thaw
269
stage compared to the control, but progressively increased at the mid- and late thaw
270
stages. Interestingly, at the late stage, the WFPS was significantly higher, but the
271
VWC was still lower than the control. Both bulk density and sand content
272
progressively increased along the permafrost thaw sequence, ranging from 0.27 to
273
0.32 g cm-3 and from 44.3% to 58.7%, respectively. The soil pH was slightly acidic,
274
ranging from 5.5 to 5.8, with a slight decrease at the early thaw stage compared to the
275
control, but progressively higher at the mid- and late thaw stages. In contrast,
276
permafrost collapse did not cause any significant change in the ALT among the thaw
277
stages, possibly because a large amount of material in the active layer eroded during
278
thermokarst development. 14
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Accompanying the changes in the soil properties, the abundances of the mcrA gene
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were substantially altered following thermokarst formation (Figure 3). Specifically,
282
while the abundances of the mcrA were not significantly different among the control,
283
early and mid-thaw stages (Figure 3a), but significantly higher at the late stage of
284
permafrost collapse (Figure 3a). In contrast, thermokarst development did not exert a
285
significant effect on the abundance of the pmoA gene (Figure 3b).
286 287
3.3 Linking CH4 fluxes to biotic and abiotic variables
288
The regression analyses were performed between the average CH4 fluxes during three
289
consecutive days and the biophysical variables measured in late July 2016. The CH4
290
fluxes exhibited positive correlations with the WFPS (r2 = 0.43, P < 0.001; Figure 4c),
291
pH (r2 = 0.53, P < 0.001; Figure 4d) and sand content (r2 = 0.64, P < 0.001; Figure 4e),
292
but did not show any significant associations with either soil temperature (P = 0.054;
293
Figure 4a) or VWC (P = 0.094; Figure 4b). Moreover, the CH4 fluxes significantly
294
increased with higher mcrA gene abundances (r2 = 0.58, P < 0.001; Figure 4f).
295
However, there was not a significant relationship between CH4 fluxes and pmoA gene
296
abundance (P = 0.31; Figure 4g).
297 298
The SEM analysis indicated that the fit of this model was good (χ2 = 5.5, df = 5, P =
299
0.35; RMSEA = 0.05; Figure 5). The combination of biotic (the abundance of the
300
mcrA gene) and abiotic factors (sand content, VWC, WFPS and pH) explained 79% of 15
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the total variance in CH4 emission along the permafrost thaw sequence. Among the
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explanatory variables, sand content, WFPS, pH and the abundance of the mcrA gene
303
had direct positive effects on CH4 emissions, with standardized coefficients ranging
304
from 22% to 48% (SI Figure 2a), whereas VWC, WFPS and sand content had indirect
305
positive effects, ranging from 18% to 32% (SI Figure 2b). Specifically, sand content
306
and VWC affected CH4 emissions by modifying the WFPS, soil pH and mcrA gene
307
copies. The WFPS regulated CH4 emissions by altering the soil pH and the abundance
308
of the mcrA gene. Of these biotic and abiotic variables, sand content was the most
309
dominant factor responsible for the variations in the CH4 fluxes along the permafrost
310
thaw sequence (SI Figure 2c).
311 312
4. DISCUSSION
313
We found that permafrost thaw and the development of a thermo-erosion gully in a
314
Tibetan swamp meadow led to a 3.5-fold increase in methane emissions, but elevated
315
CH4 emissions emerged only 20 years following the thaw. The CH4 emissions from
316
the undisturbed meadow during peak growing season were relatively low and similar
317
to the emissions from the early and mid-thaw stages within the thermo-erosion gully
318
(0.20 mg m-2 h-1 in 2015; 0.22 mg m-2 h-1 in 2016), and also similar to those observed
319
in an arctic upland permafrost region13, 52 (Figure 2). The methane emissions from the
320
late thaw stage were moderate (0.74 mg m-2 h-1 in 2015; 1.33 mg m-2 h-1 in 2016) and
321
more similar in magnitude to the emissions from boreal bogs (Figure 2). Our finding
322
is supported by Abbott et al. (2015) who also demonstrated an increase in soil CH4 16
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concentrations after thermokarst formation in upland regions. However, our finding is
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conflicted by a recent study that reported a decrease in soil CH4 fluxes in another
325
thermo-erosion gully on the Tibetan Plateau29. This difference may be related to
326
different hydrological conditions of the soils in the two study sites. Specifically, the
327
volumetric water content (VWC) observed in this study was higher than that reported
328
by Mu et al. (2017) (~67% vs. ~40%), and may have caused the greater sand content
329
by increasing the potential for the erosion of finer material37, 38. The higher sand
330
content at the late thaw stage has been indicated to enhance the CH4 emissions at our
331
study site39, 40. Such a difference between the two study sites could also result from
332
the different thermokarst-induced changes in the soil bulk density. Specifically, soil
333
bulk density has been reported to be relatively stable after permafrost collapse by Mu
334
et al. (2017). However, the soil bulk density increased significantly at our study site
335
(Table 1), which resulted in decreased soil porosity and increased WFPS. The increase
336
in the WFPS likely enhanced CH4 production at our study site53. Lastly, the
337
thermokarst-induced changes in methanogen abundance could differ between the two
338
study sites, which may also be responsible for the different CH4 flux responses to
339
thermokarst formation. Nevertheless, this possibility should be tested in future studies.
340 341
Our results showed that sand content was the dominant driver of CH4 emissions along
342
the thaw sequence. The close association between CH4 fluxes and sand content
343
observed in this study could be attributed to the following three aspects. First, sand
344
content could directly regulate CH4 emissions by controlling the transport from soils 17
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345
to the atmosphere40, 41. It is widely accepted that coarse soil textures are usually
346
favorable for CH4 diffusion, and thus increase CH4 emissions39, 40. Although increased
347
sand content could also stimulate methanotrophs by favoring the transportation for
348
oxygen import54, it could inhibit methanotrophs in other ways. For instance, the
349
increase in sand content was accompanied by the decrease in soil nitrogen content
350
along the thaw sequence (SI Figure 4), which could then increase the competition for
351
nitrogen resources between methanotrophs and lead to a lower gene abundance of
352
methanotrophs55 (SI Figure 5). Nevertheless, considering the non-significant
353
relationship between CH4 fluxes and methanotrophs (P = 0.31), the increased sand
354
content led to greater CH4 emissions along the thaw sequence mainly by enhancing its
355
transportation from soils to the atmosphere. Second, sand content could exert indirect
356
effects on CH4 release by adsorbing less H+, increasing the soil pH, and thus
357
promoting the CH4 fluxes via regulating CH4 production in the acidic soil39, 42. Third,
358
sand content could further regulate CH4 emissions by indirectly increasing the
359
WFPS56, which has been demonstrated to be another key factor that determines CH4
360
emissions along the thaw sequence (Figure 5). Taken together, our results highlight
361
that changes in soil structure cannot be overlooked when examining CH4 dynamics
362
under upland thermokarst.
363 364
Our results also revealed that upland thermokarst formation increased CH4 emission
365
despite the decreased VWC. The soil water status regulates CH4 emission primarily
366
via controlling CH4 production and the oxidation process30, 31. Actually, the WFPS, 18
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rather than the VWC itself, may better reflect these processes because the WFPS is
368
not only related to the VWC but also significantly influenced by soil bulk density.
369
Given that soil bulk density was elevated at the late stage of permafrost collapse
370
(Table 1), the soil environment can still become more anaerobic despite the decrease
371
in the VWC, thus increasing CH4 production and reducing oxidation of CH4 when it
372
passes through the soil pores. In support of this deduction, our results revealed that the
373
CH4 flux had a non-significant correlation with the VWC (Figure 4b), and the VWC
374
was only indirectly related to CH4 emissions via the WFPS (Figure 5). Thereby,
375
thermokarst-induced increases in the WFPS could be responsible for the higher CH4
376
emission rates occurred at the late stage of permafrost collapse.
377 378
Our results further illustrated that CH4 flux was significantly related to the
379
methanogen abundance, while it had no relationship with the abundance of
380
methanotroph genes (Figure 4f-g), demonstrating that the CH4 production process
381
dominates the CH4 flux pattern along this permafrost thaw sequence. The
382
methanogens are an important group of archaea that convert acetate, CO2 and H2 into
383
CH4 under anaerobic conditions57,
384
abundance exhibited a pattern similar to that of the CH4 emissions along the
385
permafrost thaw sequence (Figure 3a). At the early stage of permafrost collapse, the
386
abrupt changes in the soil environments caused the decline in the WFPS, which was
387
not beneficial for the growth of methanogens, thus decreasing the abundance of the
388
mcrA genes. After a certain period of disturbance, the abundance of microorganisms
58
. We found that the changes in methanogen
19
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389
would gradually recover (the mid-stage), and at the late stage of permafrost thaw, the
390
more anaerobic conditions may lead to an increased abundance of methanogens32.
391
Thus, the thermokarst-induced changes in methanogen abundance affected the CH4
392
production potential (SI Figure 3) and the in situ CH4 emission rates (Figure 4f;
393
Figure 5). Nevertheless, the microbial gene abundances at the DNA level cannot
394
represent the activity of microbes although they were widely linked to greenhouse gas
395
emissions in previous studies35, 59, 60. Further experiments at the RNA or protein levels
396
should be conducted in future studies to better reflect the activity of microbes.
397 398
It is generally assumed that soil temperature is one of the major factors that control
399
CH4 emissions across permafrost zones13. However, we did not find any significant
400
correlation between CH4 fluxes and soil temperature along the thaw sequence. This is
401
likely due to the narrow range of soil temperature measured during the end of July,
402
which was only approximately 1.5 °C among the various thaw stages. Actually, the
403
soil temperature may be found to regulate CH4 emissions if the data from other times
404
of day or year are included. To test this point, we compared the seasonal dynamics of
405
soil temperature and CH4 fluxes and found that they displayed consistent trends (SI
406
Figure 6a). Moreover, a significant linear relationship was observed between CH4
407
fluxes and soil temperature (r2 = 0.12, P < 0.05; SI Figure 6b). Therefore, soil
408
temperature dynamics are still important to CH4 fluxes across upland permafrost
409
regions.
410 20
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411
In conclusion, the results from our two-year field survey indicated that upland
412
thermokarst significantly increased CH4 emissions during the peak growing season
413
from a typical thermo-erosion gully on the Tibetan Plateau, particularly at the later
414
thaw stage (Figure 2). Our results also revealed that the WFPS, rather than the VWC
415
per se, regulated the CH4 emission patterns along the thaw sequence, and sand content
416
was the most dominant factor that influenced CH4 flux by modifying the transport
417
processes (Figure 5). These findings have two important implications for
418
understanding the carbon-climate feedback in permafrost regions. First, upland
419
thermokarst enhanced the CH4 emissions in our study, which differ from the
420
traditional view that upland thermokarst could result in a decrease in CH4 flux. These
421
findings suggest that thermokarst-associated changes in CH4 emissions vary across
422
upland permafrost regions, and projecting CH4 emissions after the development of
423
upland thermokarst is more challenging than previously thought. Second, the changes
424
to the soil structure following upland thermokarst cannot be ignored as a major driver
425
of the response of methane emissions. Despite the fact that previous studies
426
emphasized that the VWC was an important factor in regulating CH4 emissions in
427
permafrost thaw regions12, 13, 61, our study highlights that the changes in soil structure
428
(e.g., sand content and bulk density) may become predominant following the
429
development of upland thermokarst despite the condition of decreased VWC. Hence,
430
the effects of thermokarst on soil structure should be considered in Earth System
431
Models used to project the permafrost carbon-climate feedback.
432 21
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433
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
434
This work was supported by the National Basic Research Program of China on Global
435
Change (2014CB954001), National Natural Science Foundation of China (31670482),
436
Key Research Program of Frontier Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences
437
(QYZDB-SSW-SMC049), Chinese Academy of Sciences-Peking University Pioneer
438
Cooperation Team, and Thousand Young Talents Program.
439 440
Supporting Information
441
CH4 production and oxidation potential measurements; q-PCR conditions for pmoA
442
and mcrA genes; results of repeated-measures ANOVA for CH4 fluxes; base model for
443
CH4 fluxes; standardized effects of biotic and abiotic variables on CH4 fluxes;
444
changes in CH4 production and oxidation potentials along the thaw sequence;
445
relationship between TN and sand content; relationship between pmoA gene
446
abundance and TN content; seasonal dynamics of soil temperature and its effects on
447
CH4 fluxes.
448 449
This information is available free of charge via the Internet at http://pubs.acs.org.
450 451
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Table 1 Changes in soil physical parameters in different thaw stages. Parameter
Control
3 years
12 years
20 years
pH
5.6±0.03ab
5.5±0.03b
5.7±0.02a
5.8±0.06a
Soil Temperature (°C)
8.6±0.13c
8.8±0.10bc 9.0±0.12ab
9.2±0.13a
Volume Water Content (%)
67.6±0.6a
48.8±2.1c
62.8±1.1b
63.1±1.8b
Soil Water-filled Pore Space (%)
77.2±1.8b
62.7±2.8c
79.1±3.8ab
84.1±1.5a
Active Layer Thickness (cm)
68.5±5.1a
76.2±17.5a
73.7±7.5a
68.7±2.2a
Soil Bulk Density (g cm-3) Sand Content (%)
0.27±0.008b 0.32±0.014a 0.28±0.012b 0.32±0.021a 44.3±0.4b
46.5±0.9b
49.7±1.8b
58.7±4.2a
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Data are expressed as the means of ten replicate plots (±1 standard error). Different
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letters indicate significant differences among the different stages since permafrost
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collapse (one-way ANOVA, P < 0.05).
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Figure legends
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Figure 1. Location map of the study area (a), image of the thermo-erosion gully (b),
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and photographs of the different thaw stages (c-f). The red dot indicates our study site,
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and the image of the thermo-erosion gully was obtained by a high-resolution
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topographic model with LiDAR (VZ-400, Riegl, Horn, Austria, analyzed with Riscan
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pro 2.0 software).
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Figure 2. Changes in CH4 fluxes along the thaw sequence in 2015 (a) and 2016 (b).
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The error bars represent the standard error determined among replicates (n = 10). The
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colors correspond to the different collapse times. The gray line indicates the mean
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value of the CH4 flux in an arctic dry tundra, and the red line indicates the mean value
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of the CH4 flux in an arctic bog (data from Olefeldt et al.13). Significant differences
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were denoted by different letters among the different stages since permafrost collapse
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(repeated-measures ANOVA, P < 0.05). The insert panels show the site-averaged CH4
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fluxes for each sampling time during the entire sampling period, with the error bars
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representing the standard error determined among replicates.
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Figure 3. Changes in the abundance of the mcrA (a) and pmoA (b) genes along the
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thaw sequence. The error bars represent the standard error determined among
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replicates (n = 10). The different letters indicate significant differences among the
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different thaw stages (one-way ANOVA, P < 0.05).
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Figure 4. Relationships between the logarithm transformed CH4 fluxes and soil
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temperature (ST), volume water content (VWC), soil water-filled porespace (WFPS),
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soil pH, sand content, and the gene copies of mcrA and pmoA. The black lines and
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shades represent the regression lines with 95% confidence intervals. Statistics (r2 and
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P values) for the linear regression are shown (***P < 0.001).
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Figure 5. Final results of structural equation model (SEM) analysis examining the
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effects of edaphic and microbial properties on CH4 flux. In the model, square boxes
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indicate variables, and the abbreviations of the variables are explained in Table 1. The
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arrows connecting the boxes indicate the direction of causation. The red arrows denote
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positive relationships. The arrow widths are proportional to the standardized path
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coefficients, which reflect the importance of the factors in the model. The proportion
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of explained variance (r2) is below each response variable in the model. The final
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model fit was evaluated by a χ2 test and RMSEA value. * P < 0.05, ** P < 0.01, ***
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P < 0.001.
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Figure 1
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Figure 2
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Figure 3
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Figure 4
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Figure 5
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