Abstract
We describe the climatology, hydrology and biogeochemistry of an extreme nitrogen deposition event that occurred in the highly glacierised environment of the European High Arctic during June 1999. Meteorological analysis, three-dimensional air mass trajectories and a 3D transport model show that blocking high pressures over Scandinavia and the rapid advection of western European pollution toward Svalbard were sufficient to cause the most concentrated (1.15 ppm NO3–N and 1.20 ppm NH4–N), high magnitude (total 26 mm and up to 2.4 mm h−1 at 30 m above sea level) nitrogen deposition event on record in this sensitive, high Arctic environment (78.91° N, 11.93° E). Since the event occurred when much of the catchment remained frozen or under snow cover, microbial utilisation of nitrogen within snowpacks and perennially unfrozen subglacial sediments, rather than soils, were mostly responsible for reducing N export. The rainfall event occurred long before the annual subglacial outburst flood and so prolonged (ca. 10 day) water storage at the glacier bed further enhanced the microbial assimilation. When the subglacial outburst eventually occurred, high runoff and concentrations of NO3 − (but not NH4 +) returned in the downstream rivers. Assimilation accounted for between 53 and 72% of the total inorganic nitrogen deposited during the event, but the annual NO3 − and NH4 + runoff yields were still enhanced by up to 5 and 40 times respectively. Episodic atmospheric inputs of reactive nitrogen can therefore directly influence the biogeochemical functioning of High Arctic catchments, even when microbial activity takes place beneath a glacier at a time when terrestrial soil ecosystems remain frozen and unresponsive.
This is a preview of subscription content, access via your institution.







References
AMAP (2006) Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Program, Assessment Report Arctic Pollution Issues, Oslo, Norway, ISBN 82-7971-045-0
Anesio AM, Hodson AJ, Fritz A, Psenner R, Sattler B (2009) High microbial activity on glaciers: importance to the global carbon cycle. Global Change Biol 15:955–960
Barrie LA (1986) Arctic air pollution: an overview of current knowledge. Atmos Environ 20:643–663
Beine HJ, Engardt M, Jaffe D, Hov O, Holmén K, Stordal F (1996) Measurements of NOx and aerosol particles at the Ny Ålesund Zeppelin mountain station on Svalbard: influence of regional and local pollution sources. Atmos Environ 30:1067–1079
Brooks PD, Williams MW, Schmidt SK (1998) Inorganic nitrogen and microbial biomass dynamics before and during snowmelt. Biogeochemistry 43:1–15
Campbell DH, Baron JL, Tonnessen KA, Brooks PD, Schuster PF (2000) Controls on nitrogen flux in alpine/subalpine watersheds of Colorado. Water Resour Res 36(1):37–47
Chapin FS, Shaver GR, Giblin AE, Nadelhoffer KJ, Laundre JA (1995) Responses of Arctic tundra to experimental and observed changes in climate. Ecology 76:694–711
Derwent RG, Jenkin ME (1990) Hydrocarbon involvement in photochemical ozone formation in Europe. In: AERE Report R-13736, United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority, Harwell Laboratory, Oxfordshire
Eneroth K, Kjellström E, Holmén K (2003) A trajectory climatology for Svalbard; investigating how atmospheric flow patterns influence observed tracer concentrations. Phys Chem Earth 28:1191–1203
Engardt M, Robertson L, Langner J (1998) A eulerian limited-area atmospheric transport model. J Appl Meteorol 38:190–210
Førland EJ, Hanssen-Bauer I, Nordli PØ (1997) Orographic precipitation at the glacier Austre Brøggerbreen, Svalbard. Report 02/97 Klima. Norwegian Meteorological Institute, Oslo
FOSS-Tecator (2000) Application note: determination of ammonium in water by Fiastar 5000 (AN 5220). FOSS-Tecator, Warrington
Gjessing Y (1977) Episodic variations of snow concentration of an Arctic snowfield. Atmos Environ 11:643–647
Gordon C, Wynn JM, Woodin SJ (2001) Impacts of increased nitrogen supply on High Arctic heath: the importance of bryophytes and phosphorus availability. New Phytol 149:461–471
Hodson A (2006) Biogeochemistry of snowmelt in an Antarctic glacial ecosystem. Water Resour Res 42. doi:10.1029/2005WR004311, 2006
Hodson A, Tranter M, Vatne G (2000) Contemporary rates of chemical denudation and atmospheric CO2 sequestration in glacier basins: an Arctic perspective. Earth Surf Proc Land 25:1447–1471
Hodson AJ, Mumford PN, Kohler J, Wynn PM (2005a) The High Arctic glacial ecosystem: new insights from nutrient budgets. Biogeochemistry 72(2):233–256
Hodson A, Kohler J, Brinkhaus M, Wynn PM (2005b) Multi-year water and surface energy budget of a high-latitude polythermal glacier: evidence for overwinter water storage in a dynamic subglacial reservoir. Ann Glaciol 42:42–46
Hodson AJ, Anesio AM, Ng F, Watson R, Quirk J, Irvine-Fynn T, Dye A, Clark C, McCloy P, Kohler J, Sattler B (2007) A glacier respires: quantifying the distribution and respiration CO2 flux of cryoconite across an entire Arctic glacial ecosystem. J Geophys Res 112:G04S36. doi:10.1029/2007JG000452
Hodson AJ, Anesio AM, Tranter M, Fountain AG, Osborn AM, Priscu J, Laybourn-Parry J, Sattler B (2008) Glacial ecosystems. Ecol Monogr 78:41–67
Hodson A, Heaton T, Langford H, Newsham K (2009) Chemical weathering and solute export by meltwater in a maritime Antarctic glacier basin. Biogeochemistry. doi:10.1007/s10533-009-9372-2
Hov Ø, Hjøllo BÅ, Eliassen A (1994) Transport distance of ammonia and ammonium in Northern Europe. 1 Model description. J Geophys Res 99:18735–18748
Irvine-Fynn TDL, Hodson AJ, Kohler J, Porter P, Vatne G (2005) Dye tracing experiments at Midtre Lovénbreen, Svalbard: preliminary results and interpretations. In Mavlyudov BR (ed) Proceedings of the 7th glacier caves and glacial karst in high mountains and polar regions. Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, pp 36–43
Isaksson E, Pohjola V, Jauhiainen T, Moore J, Pinglot J-F, Vaikmäe R, van de Wal RSW, Hagen J-O, Ivask J, Karlöf L, Martma T, Meijer HAJ, Mulvaney R, Thomassen MPA, Van den Broeke M (2001) A new ice core from Lomonosovfonna, Svalbard: viewing the 1920–97 data in relation to present climate and environmental conditions. J Glaciol 47:335–345
Julin AC (2003) Atmosfärisk Transport Av Nitrat Till Svalbard; En Trajektorie- Och Modell Studie, Unpublished MSc. Thesis, University of Stockholm, 48 pp
King EC, Smith AM, Murray T, Stuart GW (2008) Glacier bed characteristics of Midtre Lovénbreen, Svalbard, from high resolution seismic and radar surveying. J Glaciol 54:145–157
Krawczyk WE, Bartoszewski SA, Siwek K (2008) Rain water chemistry at Calypsobyen, Svalbard. Polish Polar Res 29:149–162
Langner J, Bergström R, Foltescu V (2005) Impact of climate change on surface ozone and deposition of sulphur and nitrogen in Europe. Atmos Environ 39:1129–1141
Law KS, Stohl A (2007) Arctic air pollution: origins and impacts. Science 315:1537–1540
Mackereth FJH, Heron J, Talling JF (1978) Water analysis: some revised methods for limnologists. Freshwater Biological Association, Ambleside
McGrath R (1989) Trajectory models and their use in the Irish Meteorological Service. Irish Meteorological Service, Glasnevin Hill, Dublin, International memorandum no. 112/89, 12 pp
Mumford PN (2002) Nutrient budgets and transport dynamics in a High Arctic glacier basin. University of Sheffield, Svalbard Unpublished Ph.D. Thesis, 286 pp
Petrone KC, Buffam I, Laudon H (2007) Hydrologic and biotic control of nitrogen export during snowmelt: a combined conservative and reactive tracer approach. Water Resour Res 43:W06420. doi:10.1029/2006WR005286
Robertson L, Langner J (1998) Source function estimate by means of variational data assimilation applied to the ETEX-1 tracer experiment. Atmos Environ 32:4219–4225
Säwström C, Mumford PN, Marshall W, Hodson AJ, Laybourn-Parry J (2002) The microbial communities and primary productivity of cryoconite holes in an Arctic glacier (Svalbard, 79°N). Polar Biol 25:591–596
Schmidt IK, Jonasson S, Michelsen A (1999) Mineralization and microbial immobilization of N and P in arctic soils in relation to season, temperature and nutrient amendment. Appl Soil Ecol 11:147–160
Shaver GR, Chapin FS (1980) Response to fertilisation by various plant growth forms in an Alaskan tundra: nutrient accumulation and growth. Ecology 61:662–675
Sickman JO, Leydecker A, Melack JM (2001) Nitrogen mass balances and abiotic controls on N retention and yield in high-elevation catchments of the Sierra Nevada, California, United States. Water Resour Res 37:1445–1461
Simoes JC, Zagorodnov VS (2001) The record of anthropogenic pollution in snow and ice in Svalbard, Norway. Atmos Environ 35:403–413
Skidmore ML, Foght JM, Sharp MJ (2000) Microbial life beneath a High Arctic glacier. Appl Environ Microbiol 66:3214–3220
Stibal M, Sabacka M, Kaštovská K (2006) Microbial communities on glacier surfaces in Svalbard: impact of physical and chemical properties on abundance and structure of cyanobacteria and algae. Microb Ecol 52:644–654
Stohl A (2006) Characteristics of atmospheric transport into the Arctic troposphere. J Geophys Res 111:D11306. doi:10.1029/2005JD006888
Tranter M (1991) Controls on the composition of snowmelt. In: Davies TD, Tranter M, Jones HG (eds) Seasonal snowpacks: processes of compositional change, NATO ASI Series G (28), Reidel Publishing, Dordrecht, Netherlands, pp 241–271
Tranter M, Brown GH, Hodson AJ, Gurnell AM (1996) Hydrochemistry as an indicator of subglacial drainage system structure: a comparison of Alpine and sub-Polar environments. Hydrol Process 10:541–556
Tye AM, Young SD, Crout NMJ, West HM, Stapleton LM, Poulton PR, Laybourn-Parry J (2005) The fate of 15N added to High Arctic tundra to mimic increased inputs of atmospheric N released from a melting snowpack. Global Change Biol 11:1640–1654
Wadham JL, Hallam KR, Hawkins J, O’Connor A (2006) Enhancement of snowpack inorganic nitrogen by aerosol debris. Tellus B 58:229–241
Wookey PA, Parsons AN, Welker JM, Potter JA, Callaghan TV, Lee JA, Press MC (1993) Comparative responses of phenology and reproductive development to simulated environmental-change in sub-arctic and High Arctic plants. Oikos 67:490–502
Wynn PM, Hodson A, Heaton T (2006) Chemical and isotopic switching within the subglacial environment of a High Arctic glacier. Biogeochemistry 78:173–193
Wynn PM, Hodson A, Heaton T, Chenery SR (2007) Nitrate production beneath a High Arctic glacier. Chem Geol 244:88–102
Acknowledgements
Hodson, Roberts and Holmén acknowledge NERC grant GR8/04339 (to Hodson) and an EU Marie Curie Initial Stage Training Network award NSINK (FP7 215503). We thank NILU for chemical analysis of precipitation and aerosol sampling, and provision of these data via EMEP, and Wenche Aas (NILU) for useful discussions. Two reviewers and the Associate Editor, Eran Hood, helped improve the manuscript.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Hodson, A., Roberts, T.J., Engvall, AC. et al. Glacier ecosystem response to episodic nitrogen enrichment in Svalbard, European High Arctic. Biogeochemistry 98, 171–184 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10533-009-9384-y
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10533-009-9384-y
Keywords
- Nitrogen enrichment
- Arctic ecosystems
- Arctic glaciers
- Meltwater biogeochemistry