Environmental Research Letters (Jan 2020)

Subsea permafrost carbon stocks and climate change sensitivity estimated by expert assessment

  • Sayedeh Sara Sayedi,
  • Benjamin W Abbott,
  • Brett F Thornton,
  • Jennifer M Frederick,
  • Jorien E Vonk,
  • Paul Overduin,
  • Christina Schädel,
  • Edward A G Schuur,
  • Annie Bourbonnais,
  • Nikita Demidov,
  • Anatoly Gavrilov,
  • Shengping He,
  • Gustaf Hugelius,
  • Martin Jakobsson,
  • Miriam C Jones,
  • DongJoo Joung,
  • Gleb Kraev,
  • Robie W Macdonald,
  • A David McGuire,
  • Cuicui Mu,
  • Matt O’Regan,
  • Kathryn M Schreiner,
  • Christian Stranne,
  • Elena Pizhankova,
  • Alexander Vasiliev,
  • Sebastian Westermann,
  • Jay P Zarnetske,
  • Tingjun Zhang,
  • Mehran Ghandehari,
  • Sarah Baeumler,
  • Brian C Brown,
  • Rebecca J Frei

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/abcc29
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 12
p. 124075

Abstract

Read online

The continental shelves of the Arctic Ocean and surrounding seas contain large stocks of organic matter (OM) and methane (CH _4 ), representing a potential ecosystem feedback to climate change not included in international climate agreements. We performed a structured expert assessment with 25 permafrost researchers to combine quantitative estimates of the stocks and sensitivity of organic carbon in the subsea permafrost domain (i.e. unglaciated portions of the continental shelves exposed during the last glacial period). Experts estimated that the subsea permafrost domain contains ∼560 gigatons carbon (GtC; 170–740, 90% confidence interval) in OM and 45 GtC (10–110) in CH _4 . Current fluxes of CH _4 and carbon dioxide (CO _2 ) to the water column were estimated at 18 (2–34) and 38 (13–110) megatons C yr ^−1 , respectively. Under Representative Concentration Pathway (RCP) RCP8.5, the subsea permafrost domain could release 43 Gt CO _2 -equivalent (CO _2 e) by 2100 (14–110) and 190 Gt CO _2 e by 2300 (45–590), with ∼30% fewer emissions under RCP2.6. The range of uncertainty demonstrates a serious knowledge gap but provides initial estimates of the magnitude and timing of the subsea permafrost climate feedback.

Keywords