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Featured researches published by K. M. Walter Anthony.


Nature | 2014

A shift of thermokarst lakes from carbon sources to sinks during the Holocene epoch

K. M. Walter Anthony; Sergey Zimov; Guido Grosse; Miriam C. Jones; Peter Anthony; F. S. Chapin; Jacques C. Finlay; Michelle C. Mack; Sergey Davydov; Peter Frenzel; Steve Frolking

Thermokarst lakes formed across vast regions of Siberia and Alaska during the last deglaciation and are thought to be a net source of atmospheric methane and carbon dioxide during the Holocene epoch. However, the same thermokarst lakes can also sequester carbon, and it remains uncertain whether carbon uptake by thermokarst lakes can offset their greenhouse gas emissions. Here we use field observations of Siberian permafrost exposures, radiocarbon dating and spatial analyses to quantify Holocene carbon stocks and fluxes in lake sediments overlying thawed Pleistocene-aged permafrost. We find that carbon accumulation in deep thermokarst-lake sediments since the last deglaciation is about 1.6 times larger than the mass of Pleistocene-aged permafrost carbon released as greenhouse gases when the lakes first formed. Although methane and carbon dioxide emissions following thaw lead to immediate radiative warming, carbon uptake in peat-rich sediments occurs over millennial timescales. We assess thermokarst-lake carbon feedbacks to climate with an atmospheric perturbation model and find that thermokarst basins switched from a net radiative warming to a net cooling climate effect about 5,000 years ago. High rates of Holocene carbon accumulation in 20 lake sediments (47 ± 10 grams of carbon per square metre per year; mean ± standard error) were driven by thermokarst erosion and deposition of terrestrial organic matter, by nutrient release from thawing permafrost that stimulated lake productivity and by slow decomposition in cold, anoxic lake bottoms. When lakes eventually drained, permafrost formation rapidly sequestered sediment carbon. Our estimate of about 160 petagrams of Holocene organic carbon in deep lake basins of Siberia and Alaska increases the circumpolar peat carbon pool estimate for permafrost regions by over 50 per cent (ref. 6). The carbon in perennially frozen drained lake sediments may become vulnerable to mineralization as permafrost disappears, potentially negating the climate stabilization provided by thermokarst lakes during the late Holocene.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2011

Modern thermokarst lake dynamics in the continuous permafrost zone, northern Seward Peninsula, Alaska

Benjamin M. Jones; Guido Grosse; Christopher D. Arp; Miriam C. Jones; K. M. Walter Anthony; Vladimir E. Romanovsky


Climatic Change | 2013

Expert assessment of vulnerability of permafrost carbon to climate change

Edward A. G. Schuur; Benjamin W. Abbott; William B. Bowden; Victor Brovkin; P. Camill; Josep G. Canadell; Jeffrey P. Chanton; F. S. Chapin; Torben R. Christensen; P. Ciais; Benjamin T. Crosby; Claudia I. Czimczik; Guido Grosse; Jennifer W. Harden; Daniel J. Hayes; Gustaf Hugelius; Julie D. Jastrow; Jeremy B. Jones; Thomas Kleinen; C. Koven; Gerhard Krinner; Peter Kuhry; David M. Lawrence; A. D. McGuire; Susan M. Natali; Jonathan O’Donnell; Chien-Lu Ping; William J. Riley; Annette Rinke; Vladimir E. Romanovsky


Biogeosciences | 2015

Reviews and syntheses: Effects of permafrost thaw on Arctic aquatic ecosystems

Jorien E. Vonk; Suzanne E. Tank; William B. Bowden; Isabelle Laurion; Warwick F. Vincent; Pavel Alekseychik; Marc Amyot; M. F. Billet; J. Canario; Rose M. Cory; Bethany Deshpande; Manuel Helbig; Mathilde Jammet; Jan Karlsson; Julia R. Larouche; Gwyneth A. MacMillan; Milla Rautio; K. M. Walter Anthony; Kimberly P. Wickland


Biogeosciences | 2014

Methane and carbon dioxide emissions from 40 lakes along a north–south latitudinal transect in Alaska

A. Sepulveda-Jauregui; K. M. Walter Anthony; K. Martinez-Cruz; S. Greene; Frederic Thalasso


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2012

Using the deuterium isotope composition of permafrost meltwater to constrain thermokarst lake contributions to atmospheric CH4 during the last deglaciation

Laura Brosius; K. M. Walter Anthony; Guido Grosse; Jeffery Chanton; Louise M. Farquharson; Pier Paul Overduin; Hanno Meyer


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2012

Simulating the decadal- to millennial-scale dynamics of morphology and sequestered carbon mobilization of two thermokarst lakes in NW Alaska

M. A. Kessler; Lawrence J. Plug; K. M. Walter Anthony


Biogeosciences | 2014

Modeling the impediment of methane ebullition bubbles by seasonal lake ice

S. Greene; K. M. Walter Anthony; David Archer; A. Sepulveda-Jauregui; K. Martinez-Cruz


Biogeosciences | 2014

Frozen ponds: production and storage of methane during the Arctic winter in a lowland tundra landscape in northern Siberia, Lena River delta

Moritz Langer; Sebastian Westermann; K. M. Walter Anthony; Karoline Wischnewski; Julia Boike


Biogeosciences | 2015

Geographic and seasonal variation of dissolved methane and aerobic methane oxidation in Alaskan lakes

K. Martinez-Cruz; A. Sepulveda-Jauregui; K. M. Walter Anthony; Frederic Thalasso

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Peter Anthony

University of Alaska Fairbanks

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A. Sepulveda-Jauregui

University of Alaska Fairbanks

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F. S. Chapin

University of Alaska Fairbanks

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Louise M. Farquharson

University of Alaska Fairbanks

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Miriam C. Jones

United States Geological Survey

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Vladimir E. Romanovsky

University of Alaska Fairbanks

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A. D. McGuire

United States Geological Survey

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