SG4: How do the water & carbon cycles operate in contrasting locations? The Arctic Tundra Flashcards

1
Q

What is tundra?

A

Tree less or barren landscape

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2
Q

What are the characteristics of the Arctic tundra?

A
  • Average temp wee below freezing throughout the year -12 degrees
  • Short, cool summer/ long dark winters
  • Permafrost occurs
  • Periglacial area
  • very low precipitation
  • Found in the Northern hemisphere
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3
Q

What is the normal climate in the Arctic Tundra?

A
  • Climatic conditions are severe and become extreme with latitude
  • 8-9 moths has a negative heat balance with average monthly temperatures below freezing.
  • Warmer summer temps allows top soil (active layer) to thaw
  • Long hours of daylight during the summer allows for short growing season
  • Mean annual temp is low
  • low mean precipitation of 20-350mm
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4
Q

What are the characteristics of the AT soil?

A
  • Active layer
  • Permafrost
  • Talik
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5
Q

What is the active layer?

A

Ground that is seasonally frozen (is thicker in summer due to thawing of permafrost & thinner in winter when the ground refreezes.

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6
Q

What is the permafrost?

A

The layer of soil that is permanently frozen all year round.

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7
Q

What is the talik?

A

The unfrozen ground that lies below the permafrost and between the active layer and permafrost.

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8
Q

What is low in the water cycle in the AT?

A
  • transpiration
  • evaporation
  • groundwater store
  • stores of moisture in the atmosphere
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9
Q

Why is transpiration low?

A

The spareness of vegetation cover & short growing season means less transpiration can occur.

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10
Q

Why is evaporation low?

A

This is because most of sun’s energy goes into the melting the snow so ground temp remain low & inhibit convection; also surface water & soil water are frozen for most of the year.

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11
Q

Why is groundwater store low?

A

Permafrost is impermeable so acts as a barrier for infiltration, percolation, recharge & groundwater flow, therefore water cannot reach the soil below the surface.

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12
Q

Why is the stores of moisture in the atmosphere low?

A

Due to low temp which reduces absolute humidity.

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13
Q

Why is river discharge high during the Summer?

A

Due to high levels of melting & higher temperatures

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14
Q

Why is river discharge low during the Winter?

A

Due to lots of freezing and lower temperatures.

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15
Q

Why is surface discharge high in the summer?

A

Extensive wetlands, ponds and lakes provide a temporary storage of water due to the thawing of the active layer & permafrost.

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16
Q

Why s surface discharge low in the winter?

A

The active layer freezes so any water on the ground is stores in solid ice.

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17
Q

Why is the AT a carbon sink?

A

The permafrost acts a carbon sink because carbon is stored in the permafrost.

18
Q

Why is there a slow release of carbon?

A

Due to extreme cold temperatures, so little decomposition by bacteria and fungi.

19
Q

How could the permafrost act as a carbon source?

A

As permafrost thaws due to global warming, the frozen organic matter inside it thaws out, too, and begins to decay. Microbes in the soil eat the matter and produces large amount of co2 which bubbles up through the soil and making it way out to the atmosphere.

20
Q

What are the flows in the carbon cycle?

A
  • Photosynthesis
  • Plant respiration
  • Decomposition
  • Soil respiration
21
Q

Why is photosynthesis low?

A

Low temp results in sparse vegetation cover. The flux is also concentrated to the short summer when the plants grow rapidly in the long daylight hours.

22
Q

Why is plant respiration low?

A

The flux is concentrated in the summer when temperatures are warmer & tundra plants are growing so release co2 by respiration.

23
Q

Why is decomposition and soil respiration low?

A

The fluxes are higher in the summer when temp are warmer & tundra plant input litter to the soil but decomposition is slow due to still considerably low temperature.

24
Q

What are the stores in the carbon cycle?

A
  • Biomass
  • Atmosphere
  • Soil
25
Q

Why is the biomass small?

A

Vegetation cover is sparse so there isn’t aren’t as many places to store the carbon.

26
Q

Why is the atmosphere store of carbon small?

A

Small fluxes of carbon e.g. low rates of plant respiration plus slow decomposition & slow soil respiration. Permafrost os a vast carbon sink.

27
Q

Why is the store of carbon in soil large?

A

Organic carbon becomes frozen in the permafrost and is locked away for 10s or 10,000 of years.

28
Q

What are the temperatures like in the Tundra?

A
  • cold temperatures or most of the ear

- Precipitation levels are low between 50-350mm per year.

29
Q

What is permeability of the rock like in the AT?

A

Low because the permafrost acts as a barrier for infiltration and percolation and so there are fewer gaps for water/ fluids to seep through.

30
Q

What is the relief like in the AT?

A

Erosion and weathering over hundreds and millions of years has led to the flattening out of the land. Mainly this has been due to former ice sheets covering the area during the last ice age and eroding most of the land. Most of the land is flat.

31
Q

What are the winter changes in the AT?

A

There is minimal chance of photosynthesis and plant growth. Water is also frozen which is required for growth.

32
Q

What are the summer changes in the AT?

A

Highest levels of co2 removal from the atmosphere into vegetation of the AT around mid summer. Also, some carbon is lost to the atmosphere because the veg is dying back and decomposition.

33
Q

What are the challenges of exploiting gas and oil in the north slope of Alaska?

A
  • 24hr darkness in winter
  • Oil spillages
  • Possible causing the cult go Alaska to flood (tsunami)
  • Permafrost is hard to build on
  • In an earthquake zone
  • Temperatures could drop to as low as -40 degrees.
34
Q

How does human activity in the AT affect the water cycle?

A
  • Thaws the permafrost = more run-off and river discharge
  • More surface stores = more evaporation
  • Mining for sand and gravel = artificial lakes created
  • Natural drainage disrupted by infrastructure e.g. buildings and roads
  • wATER EXTRACTION FOR INDUSTRIAL USE
35
Q

How does human activity affect the carbon cycle in the AT?

A
  • Thaws the permafrost, increasingly the microbial activity allows more decomposition so more co2 and CH4 emissions
  • Gas flaring & oil spillage releases co2
  • Less veg means less photosynthesis and a smaller biomass store.
36
Q

What are the management strategies used to moderate the impacts of the oil and gas industry?

A
  • Roads and buildings on gravel pads
  • Building elevated on piles
  • TAPS on elevated & refrigerated piles
37
Q

Roads and buildings on gravel pads?

A

Larger structures built on aggregate pads. These are layers of coarse and gravel 1-2m deep.
Reduces heat transfer from house to the ground.

38
Q

Buildings elevated on piles?

A

Building houses on stilts or adjusting;e legs. Lengthten the legs as the active layer thaws in summer or if the ground expands. Building on stilts means that buildings are raised so heat from the building cannot melt the permafrost. E.g. BP Operations Centre in Prudhoe Bay Alaska.

39
Q

TAPS on elevated & refrigerated piles

A

Oil is pumped through the pipeline at 80 degrees to keep it flowing. To prevent the permafrost from thawing, TAPs is built on stilts so it is above ground has an insulated coating which is 10cm thick surrounding the pipe.

40
Q

What is the impact of long term global climate change on the AT?

A

Global temperatures are increasing and the effect of climate change on the carbon cycle in the AT is currently unknown. it could lead to loss of carbon from the permafrost if the Tundra thawed, which would make the landscape a carbon source.

41
Q

What is the evidence we are not at the tipping point?

A

Research from arctic long term ecological research project looked at Toolik Lake, Alaska’s North Slope 20 year survey started in 1989 and greenhouses were placed over small areas of permafrost to see whether climate change will lead to more carbon being released from the permafrost as it thaws. It didn’t.

42
Q

What is the evidence we are at the tipping point?

A

He says if the temperatures rise 1.5 degrees above pre industrial evils then we would see more permafrost thaw. global temperatures have increased by 0.8 degrees since the late 1800s, so he says we would soo. reach the ‘tipping point’.