Landscape Change and Microbial Response in the McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica: Preliminary Results
Abstract
Permafrost in the McMurdo Dry Valleys (MDV), Antarctica is ubiquitous with active layer depths ranging from a few cm at the highest elevations to 1 m near sea level. Although many landscapes in this region have been considered stable over millennia, ad-hoc field observations have documented extreme geomorphic changes in the valley bottoms over the past decade. To assess these changes across the region, we compared a lidar dataset surveyed in the austral summers of 2001-2002 against one surveyed in 2014-2015. Results showed that the vertical resolution of the surveys was < 0.1m. However, a mounting bias of the NASA sensor reduced the resolution of the elevation differences and we ignored differences < ±0.25 m. The surveys revealed large (>1m) landscape changes, including stream channel incision into buried ice deposits (implying the advection of heat by stream water locally degrades thermokarst) and slope failures in thermokarst landforms from block failure and insolation-driven retreat. Smaller changes (<0.5 m) were observed in stream channels where lateral bank erosion intercepted buried ice, or in thermokarst ponds. The magnitude and rate of change is much larger than observed previously in this otherwise stable and slowly changing environment. Biological surveys and experimental manipulations show that wetted soils host microbial communities different from those hosted by adjacent dry soils, and are hotspots of biodiversity highly susceptible to changing physical conditions. In all cases field-checked, the association of sediment and rock debris blanketing buried ice was noted, indicating these are the most vulnerable landscapes to climate warming. Ground penetrating radar mapping of buried ice showed, however, that not all buried ice is associated with landscape change due to the depth of burial, slope, and proximity to stream water. Similarly, modeling of soil temperatures suggests a spatial heterogeneity in warming rates across the valley bottom, as a consequence of microclimatic influences, topographic shading and moisture content. Collectively, these conditions imply that landscapes in the MDV will become progressively unstable in a warming future as heat is increasingly transported to greater depths in the valley floor, and that these changes are likely to significantly impact the associated microbial communities.
- Publication:
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AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2017
- Bibcode:
- 2017AGUFM.C21C1127F
- Keywords:
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- 0475 Permafrost;
- cryosphere;
- and high-latitude processes;
- BIOGEOSCIENCES;
- 0702 Permafrost;
- CRYOSPHERE;
- 0708 Thermokarst;
- CRYOSPHERE;
- 0793 Biogeochemistry;
- CRYOSPHERE