http://www.nature.com/ngeo/journal/v5/n10/full/ngeo1573.html

Significant contribution to climate warming from the permafrost carbon
feedback

Andrew H. MacDougall, Christopher A. Avis & Andrew J. Weaver

Nature Geoscience 5, 719–721 (2012)

doi:10.1038/ngeo1573
Received 04 May 2012
Accepted 10 August 2012
Published online 09 September 2012

Abstract

Permafrost soils contain an estimated 1,700 Pg of carbon, almost twice the
present atmospheric carbon pool1. As permafrost soils thaw owing to climate
warming, respiration of organic matter within these soils will transfer
carbon to the atmosphere, potentially leading to a positive feedback.
Models in which the carbon cycle is uncoupled from the atmosphere, together
with one-dimensional models, suggest that permafrost soils could release
7–138 Pg carbon by 2100 (refs 3, 4). Here, we use a coupled global climate
model to quantify the magnitude of the warming generated by the feedback
between permafrost carbon release and climate. According to our
simulations, permafrost soils will release between 68 and 508 Pg carbon by
2100. We show that the additional surface warming generated by the feedback
between permafrost carbon and climate is independent of the pathway of
anthropogenic emissions followed in the twenty-first century. We estimate
that this feedback could result in an additional warming of 0.13–1.69 °C by
2300. We further show that the upper bound for the strength of the feedback
is reached under the less intensive emissions pathways. We suggest that
permafrost carbon release could lead to significant warming, even under
less intensive emissions trajectories

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