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Hydrological Cycle Intensification and Permafrost Thaw Drive Increased Freshwater and Organic Carbon Inputs to Northern Alaska Estuaries
Citations
Abstract
Understanding how hydrological inflows and climate change influence individual estuaries across northern Alaska is limited by a paucity of measured data, necessitating the application of suitably scaled numerical process models. This study uses an updated model to quantify freshwater discharge and dissolved organic carbon (DOC) export from the North Slope of Alaska (NSA) to coastal waters of the Beaufort Sea and examines climate-linked temporal changes. The model was applied at 1 km resolution across the 166,483 square kilometer NSA domain over 1980–2023. Watershed inputs to coastal waters were estimated by routing along river networks to 1,039 outlets at the land-sea boundary. Key simulation parameters were evaluated to demonstrate model efficacy, then spatial and temporal patterns were quantified. Exports to specific lagoons, bays, and sounds demonstrate how landscape composition, terrestrial drainage basin size, and estuary area modulate watershed influence on coastal ecosystems across the region. Freshwater discharge and DOC export increased over the greater than four decades, associated with changes in precipitation and permafrost thaw. Surface and supra-permafrost subsurface fluxes also increased, with pronounced rises in proportional contributions via subsurface flow during summer and autumn. These changes have the potential to substantially impact salinity and trophic conditions along Alaska's Beaufort Sea coast. Our study highlights the value of model-data syntheses that resolve regional-to-local scale fluxes where observational measurements are sparse, and provides novel quantitative export metrics that will be useful to researchers, resource managers, and other stakeholders with interests in the climate, hydrology, and biogeochemistry of coastal northern Alaska.
Type
Article
Date
2026
Publisher
Degree
Advisors
License
Attribution 4.0 International
License
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/