Climate warming is accelerating the thawing of permafrost,
which
contains almost twice as much carbon as the atmosphere, to a point
where a large quantity of dissolved organic matter (DOM) is being
mobilized toward surface waters, including thermokarst ponds. DOM
can be partially photodegraded into volatile organic compounds (VOCs),
which are little studied in Arctic environments. The main objective
of this work is to identify and quantify the VOCs emitted to the gas
phase by photochemistry from thermokarst water sampled in four ponds
from two study sites in northern Quebec. VOC emissions were characterized
by proton-transfer reaction mass spectrometry. Results show rapid
photoproduction of between 35 and 59 VOCs when DOM water samples are
exposed to radiation. Our results also show that the quality of DOM
is a more important factor to control VOC photoproduction than the
quantity of DOM. Depending on the assumptions used in upscaling our
laboratory results to the field sites, calculations yield net carbon
fluxes between 1.93 and 174 μmol C m–2 d–1. While these values are small compared to literature
values of CO2 and CH4 fluxes from thermokarst
ponds, this process represents an important flux of reactive molecules
that could affect Arctic atmospheric chemistry