4:15 PM - 4:30 PM
[MIS14-10] Reason for the high concentration of dissolved iron in the Amur River from 1995 to 1997 - possibility due to permafrost degradation -
Keywords:Biogeochemical cycles, Permafrost, Climate change
Amur River basin covers a large area (1,855,500 km2) in Eastern Eurasia, including the Russian Far East, North-Eastern China, and Eastern Mongolia. Permafrost is widely distributed in the northern part of the basin (Russian and Mongolian regions), although the distribution is quite scattered in these regions. In this study, the Amur River basin was divided into three regions: Russia, China, and Mongolia. For each region, annual mean air temperature (Ta) and late summer (July, August, September; JAS) mean net precipitation (precipitation minus evaporation ; P - E) were calculated from 1960 to 2000. The amount of P - E is the same as net recharge of water into the soil layer. Therefore, we investigated P - E to understand the long-term tendency of soil wetness and effect of groundwater discharge, which could be related to iron redox reaction and dFe movement. The data used for annual mean temperature and JAS mean P - E were Climate Research Unit (CRU gridded time series version 4.05) and Japanese Reanalysis Project (JRA-55), respectively.
Values of Ta in the three regions (Russia, China, and Mongolia) showed a similar trend from 1960 to 2000. It was remarkable that considerably high Ta was observed from 1988 to 1990. There was no correlation between the trend of Ta and annual dFe concentration in the Amur River. However, interestingly, cross-correlation between the two variables showed a significant positive correlation with a 7-year lag in the three regions (Russia R = 0.55 p<0.01, China R = 0.43 p<0.01, Mongolia R = 0.49 p<0.01). Considering the highest correlation in the Russian region where permafrost is widely distributed, this result suggests that intensive dFe generation occurred near the permafrost table in a hot year and dFe discharged into the Amur River with a 7-year time lag through the deeper part of the active layer. Moreover, JAS mean P - E showed continuously positive value (P - E > 0) from 1977 to 1997 in the three regions, especially in Russia and Mongolia. This fact implied that the active layer was wet in this period, leading to a huge amount of dFe generation in deep soils when permafrost degraded in the hot years from 1988 to 1990, and dFe discharged into the Amur River from 1995 to 1997. Although it is necessary to make this hypothesis more certain, these findings are expected to provide the relationship between permafrost degradation due to climate change and dFe concentration in the Amur River basin.