Decades-Long Evolution of Post-Fire Permafrost Deformation Detected by InSAR: Insights From Chronosequence in North Yukon
["Cao, Zetao","Furuya, Masato"]
2025-08-22
期刊论文
(4)
Permafrost, a critical global cryospheric component, supports subarctic boreal forests but is frequently disturbed by wildfires, an important driver of permafrost degradation. Wildfires reduce vegetation, organic layers, and surface albedo, leading to active layer thickening and ground subsidence. Recent studies using interferometric synthetic aperture radar (InSAR) have confirmed the rapid and extensive post-fire permafrost degradation, and have largely focused on short-term impacts. However, the longer-term post-fire permafrost deformation, potentially persisting for decades, remains poorly understood due to limited data. Here, we applied InSAR in North Yukon to detect deformation signals across multiple fire scars in the past five decades. Using a chronosequence (space-for-time substitution) approach, we summarize a continuous trajectory of post-fire permafrost evolution: (a) an initial degradation stage, characterized by abrupt subsidence up to 50 mm/year and gradually slowing over the first decade, with cumulative subsidence exceeding 100 mm locally; (b) an aggradation stage from approximately 15 to 30 years after fire, marked by ground uplift reaching 25 mm/year before gradually declining, compensating for the earlier subsidence; and (c) a stabilization stage beyond three to four decades, where permafrost nearly recovers to pre-fire conditions with indistinguishable deformation between burned and unburned areas. Notably, the rarely-reported uplift phase appears closely related to vegetation regeneration and fire-greening feedback that provide thermal protection, suggesting a critical mechanism of permafrost recovery. These findings provide new insights into the resilience of boreal-permafrost systems to wildfires and also underscore the importance of long-term InSAR monitoring in understanding permafrost responses to wildfires under climate change.
来源平台:AGU ADVANCES