Landsat satellite images of the four soil landscapes showing: rocky uplands along Taylor Highway with stable surfaces subject to frequent fires; silty uplands near Hess Creek with mostly stable surfaces with occasional deep thermokarst lakes; gravelly–sandy lowlands on the Yukon Flats with widespread lake drainage associated with thawing permafrost; and peaty–silty lowlands on the Innoko Flats with widespread thermokarst M Torre Jorgenson Yuri Shur Qianlai Zhuang Kristen Manies Stephanie Ewing Kim Wickland Jonathan O'Donnell Mikhail Kanevskiy Jennifer Harden Robert Striegl 10.6084/m9.figshare.1011738.v1 https://iop.figshare.com/articles/figure/_Landsat_satellite_images_of_the_four_soil_landscapes_showing_rocky_uplands_along_Taylor_Highway_wit/1011738 <p><strong>Figure 2.</strong> Landsat satellite images of the four soil landscapes showing: rocky uplands along Taylor Highway with stable surfaces subject to frequent fires; silty uplands near Hess Creek with mostly stable surfaces with occasional deep thermokarst lakes; gravelly–sandy lowlands on the Yukon Flats with widespread lake drainage associated with thawing permafrost; and peaty–silty lowlands on the Innoko Flats with widespread thermokarst. Sampling locations shown as white dots.</p> <p><strong>Abstract</strong></p> <p>The diversity of ecosystems across boreal landscapes, successional changes after disturbance and complicated permafrost histories, present enormous challenges for assessing how vegetation, water and soil carbon may respond to climate change in boreal regions. To address this complexity, we used a chronosequence approach to assess changes in vegetation composition, water storage and soil organic carbon (SOC) stocks along successional gradients within four landscapes: (1) rocky uplands on ice-poor hillside colluvium, (2) silty uplands on extremely ice-rich loess, (3) gravelly–sandy lowlands on ice-poor eolian sand and (4) peaty–silty lowlands on thick ice-rich peat deposits over reworked lowland loess. In rocky uplands, after fire permafrost thawed rapidly due to low ice contents, soils became well drained and SOC stocks decreased slightly. In silty uplands, after fire permafrost persisted, soils remained saturated and SOC decreased slightly. In gravelly–sandy lowlands where permafrost persisted in drier forest soils, loss of deeper permafrost around lakes has allowed recent widespread drainage of lakes that has exposed limnic material with high SOC to aerobic decomposition. In peaty–silty lowlands, 2–4 m of thaw settlement led to fragmented drainage patterns in isolated thermokarst bogs and flooding of soils, and surface soils accumulated new bog peat. We were not able to detect SOC changes in deeper soils, however, due to high variability. Complicated soil stratigraphy revealed that permafrost has repeatedly aggraded and degraded in all landscapes during the Holocene, although in silty uplands only the upper permafrost was affected. Overall, permafrost thaw has led to the reorganization of vegetation, water storage and flow paths, and patterns of SOC accumulation. However, changes have occurred over different timescales among landscapes: over decades in rocky uplands and gravelly–sandy lowlands in response to fire and lake drainage, over decades to centuries in peaty–silty lowlands with a legacy of complicated Holocene changes, and over centuries in silty uplands where ice-rich soil and ecological recovery protect permafrost.</p> 2013-07-16 00:00:00 Complicated soil stratigraphy gravelly water storage soc silty uplands landscape drier forest soils lowlands lake drainage peaty fire permafrost Environmental Science