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The Arctic has been warming much faster than the global average, known as Arctic amplification. The active layer is seasonally frozen in winter and thaws in summer. In the 2017 Arctic Boreal Vulnerability Experiment (ABoVE) airborne campaign, airborne L- and P- band synthetic aperture radar (SAR) was used to acquire a dataset of active layer thickness (ALT) and vertical soil moisture profile, at 30 m resolution for 51 swaths across the ABoVE domain. Using a thawing degree day (TDD) model, ALT=K root TDD, we estimated ALT along the ABoVE swaths employing the 2-m air temperature from ERA5. The coefficient (K) calibrated has an R2=0.9783. We also obtained an excellent fit between ALT and K root(TDD/theta) where theta is the soil moisture from ERA5 (R2=0.9719). Output based on shared-social economic pathway (SSP) climate scenarios SSP 1-2.6, SSP 2-4.5, and SSP 5-8.5 from seven global climate models (GCMs), statistically downscaled to 25-km resolution, was used to project the impacts of climate warming on ALT. Assuming ALT=K root TDD, the projections of UKESM1-0-LL GCM resulted in the largest projected ALT, up to about 0.7 m in 2080s under SSP5-8.5. Given that the mean observed ALT of the study sites is about 0.482 m, this implies that ALT will increase by 0.074 to 0.217 m (15% and 45%) in 2080s. This will have substantial impacts on Arctic infrastructure. The projected settlement Iset (cm) of 1 to 7 cm will also impact the infrastructure, especially by differential settlement due to the high spatial variability of ALT and soil moisture, given at local scale the actual thawing will partly depend on thaw sensitivity of the material and potential thaw strain, which could vary widely from location to location.

期刊论文 2025-10-01 DOI: 10.1061/JHYEFF.HEENG-6485 ISSN: 1084-0699

Permafrost is one of the crucial components of the cryosphere, covering about 25% of the global continental area. The active layer thickness (ALT), as the main site for heat and water exchange between permafrost and the external atmosphere, its changes significantly impact the carbon cycle, hydrological processes, ecosystems, and the safety of engineering structures in cold regions. This study constructs a Stefan CatBoost-ET (SCE) model through machine learning and Blending integration, leveraging multi-source remote sensing data, the Stefan equation, and measured ALT data to focus on the ALT in the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau (QTP). Additionally, the SCE model was verified via ten-fold cross-validation (MAE: 20.713 cm, RMSE: 32.680 cm, R2: 0.873, and MAPE: 0.104), and its inversion of QTP's ALT data from 1958 to 2022 revealed 1998 as a key turning point with a slow growth rate of 0.25 cm/a before 1998 and a significantly increased rate of 1.26 cm/a afterward. Finally, based on multiple model input factor analysis methods (SHAP, Pearson correlation, and Random Forest Importance), the study analyzed the ranking of key factors influencing ALT changes. Meanwhile, the importance of Stefan equation results in SCE model is verified. The research results of this paper have positive implications for eco-hydrology in the QTP region, and also provide valuable references for simulating the ALT of permafrost.

期刊论文 2025-06-10 DOI: 10.3390/rs17122006

The extent of wildfires in tundra ecosystems has dramatically increased since the turn of the 21st century due to climate change and the resulting amplified Arctic warming. We simultaneously studied the recovery of vegetation, subsurface soil moisture, and active layer thickness (ALT) post-fire in the permafrost-underlain uplands of the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta in southwestern Alaska to understand the interaction between these factors and their potential implications. We used a space-for-time substitution methodology with 2017 Landsat 8 imagery and synthetic aperture radar products, along with 2016 field data, to analyze tundra recovery trajectories in areas burned from 1953 to 2017. We found that spectral indices describing vegetation greenness and surface albedo in burned areas approached the unburned baseline within a decade post-fire, but ecological succession takes decades. ALT was higher in burned areas compared to unburned areas initially after the fire but negatively correlated with soil moisture. Soil moisture was significantly higher in burned areas than in unburned areas. Water table depth (WTD) was 10 cm shallower in burned areas, consistent with 10 cm of the surface organic layer burned off during fire. Soil moisture and WTD did not recover in the 46 years covered by this study and appear linked to the long recovery time of the organic layer.

期刊论文 2025-04-01 DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/adbfaa ISSN: 1748-9326

Whilst permafrost change is widely concerned in the context of global warming, lack of observations becomes one of major limitations for conducting large-scale and long-term permafrost change research. Reanalysis/assimilation data in theory can make up for the lack of observations, but how they characterize permafrost extent and active layer thickness remains unclear. Here, we investigate the near-surface permafrost extent and active layer thickness characterized by seven reanalysis/assimilation datasets (CFSR, MERRA-2, ERA5, ERA5-Land, GLDAS-CLSMv20, GLDAS-CLSMv21, and GLDAS-Noah). Results indicate that most of reanalysis/assimilation data have limited abilities in characterizing near-surface permafrost extent and active layer thickness. GLDAS-CLSMv20 is overall optimal in terms of comprehensive performance in characterizing both present-day near-surface permafrost extent and active layer thickness change. The GLDAS-CLSMv20 indicates that near-surface permafrost extent decreases by -0.69 x 106 km2 decade-1 and active layer deepens by 0.06 m decade-1 from 1979 to 2014. Change in active layer is significantly correlated to air temperature, precipitation, and downward longwave radiation in summer, but the correlations show regional differences. Our study implies an imperative to advance reanalysis/assimilation data's abilities to reproduce permafrost, especially for reanalysis data.

期刊论文 2025-01-01 DOI: 10.1002/asl.1289 ISSN: 1530-261X

On Spitsbergen, Svalbard, the Nordenski & ouml;ld Land Permafrost Observatory provides ground temperature time series from 2008 to the present in 16 boreholes located in a variety of periglacial landforms. This study presents trends in permafrost temperatures and active layer thickness, compares these trends to observed climatic changes, and differentiates the climate sensitivity of the studied periglacial landforms. Ground temperature variability in these landforms is driven by Svalbard's air temperature gradients due to elevation and from the warmer west coast to the colder interior, in addition to snow cover and landform dynamics. During the study period, increases in permafrost temperatures and active layer thickness, closely tied to rapid climate warming on Svalbard, were observed at nearly all sites. The observed rates of active layer thickness increase, ranging from 0.5 to 10.7 cm/year, are on the high end of observed values across the circum-Arctic. Decadal increase in temperature at 20 m depth reaches 0.9 degrees C; the Canadian High Arctic and the Beaufort-Chukchi region are the only Arctic areas with permafrost warming of comparable magnitude. The landforms that are entirely or predominately composed of bedrock or a blocky substrate are the most thermally sensitive to climate change.

期刊论文 2025-01-01 DOI: 10.1139/as-2024-0027

Hydrologic-land surface models (H-LSMs) offer a physically-based framework for representing and predicting the present and future states of the extensive high-latitude permafrost areas worldwide. Their primary challenge, however, is that soil temperature data are severely limited, and traditional model validation, based only on streamflow, can show the right fit to these data for the wrong reasons. Here, we address this challenge by (1) collecting existing data in various forms including in-situ borehole data and different large-scale permafrost maps in addition to streamflow data, (2) comprehensively evaluating the performance of an H-LSM with a wide range of possible process parametrizations and initializations, and (3) assessing possible trade-offs in model performance in concurrently representing hydrologic and permafrost dynamics, thereby pointing to the possible model deficiencies that require improvement. As a case study, we focus on the sub-arctic Liard River Basin in Canada, which typifies vast northern sporadic and discontinuous permafrost regions. Our findings reveal that different process parameterizations tend to align with different data sources or variables, which largely exhibit inconsistencies among themselves. We further observe that a model may fail to represent permafrost occurrence yet seemingly fit streamflows adequately. Nonetheless, we demonstrate that accurately representing essential permafrost dynamics, including the active soil layer and insulation effects from snow cover and soil organic matter, is crucial for developing high-fidelity models in these regions. Given the complexity of processes and the incompatibility among different data sources/variables, we conclude that employing an ensemble of carefully designed model parameterizations is essential to provide a reliable picture of the current conditions and future spatio-temporal co-evolution of hydrology and permafrost.

期刊论文 2024-12-01 DOI: 10.1016/j.jhydrol.2024.132161 ISSN: 0022-1694

Permafrost in the Northern Hemisphere has been degrading under climate change, affecting climatic, hydrological, and ecological systems. To reveal the temporal and spatial characteristics of permafrost degradation under climate change, we quantified permafrost thermal states and active layer thicknesses using observational data covering various periods and different areas of the Northern Hemisphere. The soil temperatures at 20 cm depth in the circumpolar Arctic permafrost regions were much lower than in the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau. The thaw period is 114 days in the circumpolar permafrost regions compared to 167 days in the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau. The active layer thickness (ALT) was largest in transitional permafrost regions and sporadic permafrost regions, and lowest in the high latitude permafrost regions and continuous permafrost regions, and the ALT generally exhibited an increasing trend. The average ALT was 1.7 m, and increased by 3.6 cm per year in the Northern Hemisphere. The mean annual ground temperature (MAGT) was largest in the high-altitude permafrost regions and isolated permafrost regions, and lowest in the high latitude permafrost regions and continuous permafrost regions. The warming rate of the MAGT was largest in the high latitude regions and lowest in the high altitude regions, and gradually increased from isolated permafrost regions to continuous permafrost regions, with an average warming rate of 0.3 degrees C per decade for the whole Northern Hemisphere. These findings provide important information for understanding the variability in permafrost degradation processes across different regions under climate change.

期刊论文 2024-11-01 DOI: 10.1016/j.catena.2024.108440 ISSN: 0341-8162

Permafrost, widely distributed in the Northern Hemisphere, plays a vital role in regulating heat and moisture cycles within ecosystems. In the last four decades, due to global warming, permafrost degradation has accelerated significantly in high latitudes and altitudes. However, the impact of permafrost degradation on vegetation remains poorly understood to date. Based on active layer thickness (ALT) monitoring data, meteorological data and normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) data, we found that most ALT-monitored sites in the Northern Hemisphere show an increasing trend in NDVI and ALT. This suggests an overall increase in NDVI from 1980 to 2021 while permafrost degradation has been occurring. Permafrost degradation positively influences NDVI growth, with the intensity of the effects varying across land cover types and permafrost regions. Furthermore, based on Mann-Kendall trend test, we detected abrupt changes in NDVI and environmental factors, further confirming that there is a strong consistency between the abrupt changes of ALT and NDVI, and the consistency between the abrupt change events of ALT and NDVI is stronger than that of air temperature and precipitation. These findings work toward a better comprehending of permafrost effects on vegetation growth in the context of climate change. Our research focuses on the influence of permafrost degradation on vegetation in high-latitude and high-altitude regions of the Northern Hemisphere. By analyzing permafrost monitoring and vegetation data, we have observed a widespread occurrence of permafrost degradation and vegetation greening in recent years across the Northern Hemisphere. Our analysis has revealed a strong connection between permafrost degradation and vegetation greening in permafrost areas, and the impact varies with different vegetation and permafrost types. In addition, we further investigated the consistency of abrupt changes in the vegetation growth with various environmental factors. It can be seen that despite the significant influence of air temperature changes on vegetation growth in permafrost regions of the Northern Hemisphere, the abrupt change of vegetation growth is consistent with the abrupt change in the process of permafrost degradation, indicating that vegetation growth displays a heightened sensitivity to permafrost degradation. These findings provide valuable insights into the ecological consequences of permafrost changes in high-latitude and high-altitude areas under the influence of climate change. Vegetation in the Northern Hemisphere shows a greening trend, and permafrost shows a degradation trend Permafrost degradation positively influences vegetation growth, with the intensity of the effects varying by vegetation and permafrost types Abrupt changes in vegetation growth are more consistent with abrupt permafrost degradation than with meteorological factors

期刊论文 2024-10-01 DOI: 10.1029/2023EF004309

The active layer, acting as an intermediary of water and heat exchange between permafrost and atmosphere, greatly influences biogeochemical cycles in permafrost areas and is notably sensitive to climate fluctuations. Utilizing the Chinese Meteorological Forcing Dataset to drive the Community Land Model, version 5.0, this study simulates the spatial and temporal characteristics of active layer thickness (ALT) on the Tibetan Plateau (TP) from 1980 to 2020. Results show that the ALT, primarily observed in the central and western parts of the TP where there are insufficient station observations, exhibits significant interdecadal changes after 2000. The average thickness on the TP decreases from 2.54 m during 1980-1999 to 2.28 m during 2000-2020. This change is mainly observed in the western permafrost region, displaying a sharp regional inconsistency compared to the eastern region. A persistent increasing trend of ALT is found in the eastern permafrost region, rather than an interdecadal change. The aforementioned changes in ALT are closely tied to the variations in the surrounding atmospheric environment, particularly air temperature. Additionally, the area of the active layer on the TP displays a profound interdecadal change around 2000, arising from the permafrost thawing and forming. It consistently decreases before 2000 but barely changes after 2000. The regional variation in the permafrost active layer over the TP revealed in this study indicates a complex response of the contemporary climate under global warming.

期刊论文 2024-09-01 DOI: 10.1016/j.aosl.2024.100536 ISSN: 1674-2834

Revegetation is an effective approach for restoring extremely degraded grassland (DG) in the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau (QTP). However, little is known about its effects on permafrost stability. Our study investigated changes in the characteristics of DG and revegetated grassland (RG) in alpine permafrost regions of the QTP by means of in situ monitoring and sampling. Compared with DG, soil temperature was lower in warm months and slightly higher in cool months both at 2 and 10 cm depths after revegetation, while soil moisture generally decreased. Revegetation advanced the onset and increased the duration of completely frozen stage. The number of freeze-thaw days decreased at 2 cm but increased at 10 cm depth. The freeze-thaw strength weakened at 2 cm depth in spring and autumn, and at 10 cm depth in autumn, but increased at 10 cm depth in spring. The thawing index at the two depths and active layer thickness in RG were also significantly lower than those in DG. Revegetation significantly affected the particle size distribution and stability of soil aggregates by increasing the proportion of large macroaggregates. Thus, revegetation can effectively improve the permafrost stability of degraded grassland in the QTP and enhance the service functions of alpine grassland ecosystems.

期刊论文 2024-06-01 DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.geoderma.2023.116350 ISSN: 0016-7061
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