Increased arctic no3- availability as a hydrogeomorphic consequence of permafrost degradation and landscape drying

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  • who: Carli A. Arendt and colleagues from the Department of Marine, Earth, and Atmospheric Sciences, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC, USA have published the research: Increased Arctic NO3- Availability as a Hydrogeomorphic Consequence of Permafrost Degradation and Landscape Drying, in the Journal: Nitrogen 2022, of /2022/
  • what: Researchers have identified two primary mechanisms that increase and - within permafrost soils: the u2018frozen feast` where previously frozen organic material becomes available it thaws and_(2) u2018shrubification` where expansion of nitrogen-fixing shrubs promotes soil Through the synthesis of original and previously published observational data and the . . .

     

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