Geochemical Phosphorus Sequestration in Tundra Soils Impedes Delivery of Bioavailable Phosphorus to the Kuparuk River, Alaska, USA: Implications for the Broader Arctic Region

  • Frederick W. Sutor
  • , Eric D. Roy
  • , Andrew W. Schroth
  • , Alexander B. Michaud
  • , David Emerson
  • , Elizabeth M. Herndon
  • , Lauren Kinsman-Costello
  • , Stephanie E. Hurley
  • , William B. Bowden

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Long-term river monitoring of the Kuparuk River (North Slope, Alaska, USA) confirms significant increases in solutes that are indicative of active layer thickening due to thawing permafrost. However, there is no evidence of an increase in total dissolved phosphorus (TDP) or soluble reactive phosphorus (SRP), the nutrient that limits primary production in this and similar rivers in the region. Here, we show that Mehlich-3 extractable iron (Fe) and aluminum (Al) in active layer soils impart high P geochemical sorption capacities across a range of landscape features that we would expect to promote lateral movement of water and solutes to headwater streams in our study watershed. Reanalysis of a recently published pan-Arctic soils database that includes active layer and permafrost soil samples suggests that this high P sorption capacity could be common in other parts of the Arctic region. We conclude that soil minerals enhance P retention on hillslopes and propose pedogenic secondary Fe and Al minerals may continue to retain P in these soils and limit biological productivity in the adjacent river even as active layer thickening increases potential P mobility in the watershed. We suggest that similar interactions may occur in other areas of the Arctic where comparable geochemical conditions prevail.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere2025JG008803
JournalJournal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences
Volume130
Issue number10
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 2025

Funding

The material presented in this report is based on work supported by the United States National Science Foundation under Grants 1754379 and 1637459. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation. The authors express our gratitude to the staff of Toolik Field Station whose assistance with field sampling was essential during the 2020 and 2021 field seasons when COVID pandemic restrictions limited our ability to work at the field station. We thank Lindsay VanFossen, Abigail Rec, Emma Hendra, Kate Rosenberg, Saul Blocher, and Alexander Medvedeff for field and lab assistance during this project.

Keywords

  • Arctic
  • biogeochemistry
  • iron
  • phosphorus
  • productivity
  • river

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