Standardized monitoring of permafrost thaw: a user-friendly, multiparameter protocol
Author(s) -
Julia Boike,
Sarah Chadburn,
Julia Martin,
Simon Zwieback,
Inge Althuizen,
Norbert Anselm,
Lei Cai,
Stéphanie Coulombe,
Hanna Lee,
Anna K. Liljedahl,
Martin Schneebeli,
Ylva Sjöberg,
Noah Smith,
Sharon L. Smith,
D. A. Streletskiy,
Simone M. Stuenzi,
Sebastian Westermann,
Evan J. Wilcox
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
arctic science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.672
H-Index - 4
ISSN - 2368-7460
DOI - 10.1139/as-2021-0007
Subject(s) - permafrost , vegetation (pathology) , metadata , environmental science , transect , protocol (science) , hydrology (agriculture) , remote sensing , physical geography , environmental resource management , geology , geography , computer science , geotechnical engineering , alternative medicine , pathology , operating system , medicine , oceanography
Climate change is destabilizing permafrost landscapes, affecting infrastructure, ecosystems, and human livelihoods. The rate of permafrost thaw is controlled by surface and subsurface properties and processes, all of which are potentially linked with each other. However, no standardized protocol exists for measuring permafrost thaw and related processes and properties in a linked manner. The permafrost thaw action group of the Terrestrial Multidisciplinary distributed Observatories for the Study of the Arctic Connections (T-MOSAiC) project has developed a protocol, for use by non-specialist scientists and technicians, citizen scientists, and indigenous groups, to collect standardized metadata and data on permafrost thaw. The protocol introduced here addresses the need to jointly measure permafrost thaw and the associated surface and subsurface environmental conditions. The parameters measured along transects include: snow depth, thaw depth, vegetation height, soil texture, and water level. The metadata collection includes data on timing of data collection, geographical coordinates, land surface characteristics (vegetation, ground surface, water conditions), as well as photographs. Our hope is that this openly available dataset will also be highly valuable for validation and parameterization of numerical and conceptual models, and thus to the broad community represented by the T-MOSAiC project.
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