Beneath
Alaskan Wildfires, A Hidden Threat: Long-Frozen Carbon's Thaw
Some
of Alaska's wildfires are dramatic: flames, vast plumes of smoke and
firefighting battles. Here, on June 17, a helicopter releases
hundreds of gallons of water onto the Stetson Creek Fire near Cooper
Landing, Alaska. But even fires that look far quieter, like they're
all burned out, can continue to smolder underground — and pose a
dangerous threat to permafrost.
SGT
3
August, 2015
The
Fish Creek Fire in Interior Alaska isn't much to look at. It's about
7,500 acres in size, sitting about an hour south of Fairbanks near
the twisty Tanana River. The main fire front — the made-for-TV
part, with torching trees and pulses of orange heat — flamed out
more than a week ago, leaving behind a quiet charred landscape.
But
the fire is far from over. It's one of nearly 300 fires still burning
in Alaska, after a spectacular lightning storm late last month
sparked hundreds of blazes and a wave of fire larger than any in the
state's history — nearly 5 million acres in total.
And
though the Fish Creek Fire looks benign, with little wisps of white
smoke as its only sign of life, it's not.
A
little fire like this could have a huge impact on the surrounding
environment and ecosystem — not just here in Alaska, but across the
planet.
Hidden
Masses Of Organic Matter
"It's
really a different kind of fire," says Teresa Hollingsworth, a
research ecologist with the U.S. Forest Service.
The
Fish Creek Fire is mostly done burning the trees and brush above
ground and has moved on to the organic matter underground — organic
matter that goes, Hollingsworth says, "meters and meters deep."
That's
why fires in the higher latitudes, in places like Alaska, are
different than other wildfires. Here, Hollingsworth explains, the
vegetation above ground is just the tip of the iceberg.
There
are layers and layers of organic material called duff — things like
pine needles, grasses and trees — that have fallen and accumulated
on the forest floor over time. They haven't fully decomposed, like
they would in a place like Florida, because of the frigid
temperatures.
In
places, the duff can pile up to be feet deep.
Below
that duff, there's permafrost — which, as the name implies, is
permanently frozen ground. It can include dirt, rocks and water, as
well as trees, twigs and mammoth bones.
The
result, Hollingsworth says: There can be way, way more organic
material, or biomass, below ground than there is above.
And
all of that biomass is made up of carbon — the same carbon that's a
leading cause of climate change.
A
Frozen Carbon Threat
That's
why ecologists and climatologists are watching this year's fire
season with so much interest.
Roughly
4.7 million acres of boreal forest and land have burned in Alaska
this summer. Millions more have burned in Canada, where scientists
estimate half of the land is underlaid with permafrost.
In
total, more than 11 million acres have burned between the two places
— an area roughly the size of Connecticut.
Fires
in the subarctic are nothing new. The vast majority of the land
burned by wildfire in North America every year is in Alaska and
Canada, far from cities and towns.
Still,
Alaska has never seen that much fire so early in its fire season. And
many of those fires are burning with greater intensity.
That's
worrying to research ecologists like Ted Schurr, a professor at the
University of Northern Arizona who spends his summers in Alaska
studying permafrost.
"It's
understood that there's about twice as much frozen carbon [in
permafrost] as there is in the atmosphere, to the tune of about 1,700
billion tons of carbon stored frozen," he says.
Put
in context, he says, there's maybe another 2,000 billion tons of
carbon stored in soil and vegetation in the rest of the world.
"The
Arctic and the boreal regions are a hotspot of carbon that's stored
in the biosphere that has some vulnerability of ending up in the
atmosphere as the climate changes," Schurr says.
One
of the more rapid ways a climate or ecosystem can change, he says, is
through fire.
Solid
Permafrost Gone Shaky
A
good example of that can be found just a half-hour drive from the
Fish Creek Fire, in a wide, densely vegetated area called the Tanana
Flats, south of Fairbanks.
Merritt
Turetsky, a research ecologist from the University of Guelph in
Canada, runs a field site there.
She
kneels on the spongy, springy ground and starts sawing through the
surface with a long knife, cutting away at that duff layer that's
burning in many of the fires around the state.
"Feel
how dry that is," she says. "I mean, we had rain last night
and it's still this dry. This stuff burns like crazy."
She
cuts more of the earth away, reaching into the hole up to her elbow.
The dirt at the bottom is cold and wet, which means it's the layer
just above intact permafrost, Turetsky says.
She
grabs at a piece of the rooty soil she just cut way.
"This
is 40 centimeters of a blanket that protects [permafrost] from what's
happening at the surface," she says. "But
when a fire comes through it might remove 15 or 25 centimeters of
this organic mat."
The
result is a thinner blanket — providing less protection for the
permafrost below.
That's
particularly problematic given the changing climate in the planet's
higher latitudes. Alaska has already warmed by more than 3 degrees
Fahrenheit in the past 50 years, rendering much of the permafrost
here unstable.
Fire
makes it even worse, Turetsky says.
For
proof, she walks just 10 yards away, through thick trees to a bald
patch a few acres in size. As she walks from the forested area to the
open area, her steps slow and her feet sink. Each step comes with an
accompanying splash.
"We
call that a quaking bog," she says. "It's like you're on a
waterbed."
It's
a thin layer of vegetation on top of muddy, soupy water — water
that was frozen in permafrost not long ago.
Can
The Ecosystem Compensate?
Turetsky
is here with a group of graduate students and researchers from the
University of Alaska Fairbanks to determine why the permafrost
thawed.
They
take core samples of trees around the bald spot's perimeter and
samples of the water below that thin layer of vegetation.
Nearly
all of the samples show signs of a fire that burned through the area
maybe 40 years ago: a fire that burned off that top layer of duff,
leaving the permafrost vulnerable to the hotter temperatures of the
last couple of decades.
Now,
Turetsky says, all of the carbon that was trapped in that permafrost,
frozen in time, is available to be put back in the atmosphere.
What
that means is debatable. Some scientists think that the ecosystem
will be able to compensate for all of that new carbon with new plant
life. They point to an increase in the number of hardwood trees in
Alaska, which grow faster and absorb more carbon, as a potential sign
of that.
Other
scientists, like Turetsky, are less optimistic. She does believe that
the environment can compensate for the carbon that's released when a
fire burns up trees and brush, and even the carbon that's been piling
up for hundreds of years in duff.
The
carbon that can get released from thawing permafrost, though?
"The
atmosphere thought it lost that carbon and all of a sudden it's being
returned to the atmosphere after a prolonged period of time,"
Turetsky says.
"That's
the kind of carbon pulse to the atmosphere that actually can invoke
additional climate change, above and beyond human emissions."
And
more climate change, she says, could mean hotter temperatures, which
could mean more fires, which could mean more permafrost lost.
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