Coastal Labrador peatland permafrost inventory

Northern peatlands cover approximately four million km², and about half of these peatlands are estimated to contain permafrost and periglacial landforms, like palsas and peat plateaus. Peatland permafrost environments are known to be sensitive to climate warming and ecosystem modifications, so understanding the distribution of these ice-rich landforms is important for predicting thermokarst potential, hydrological and vegetation change, and carbon cycling activities. We applied a multi-stage consensus-based approach to develop a first inventory of peatland permafrost complexes in Labrador, spanning from 51 to 61°N, with a focus on the area within 100 km of the Labrador Sea and Gulf of St. Lawrence coastline. A team of three mappers identified a total of 2092 prospective peatland permafrost complexes in coastal Labrador and adjacent parts of Quebec using high-resolution satellite imagery available via Esri ArcGIS Online (Maxar Vivid imagery, 0.5 m spatial resolution, 5 m spatial accuracy, imagery acquisition dates 2010-2020) (Esri, 2022). Each prospective peatland permafrost complex was subsequently reviewed by two of the three mappers into classes of likely, possible, and unlikely peatland permafrost complexes. Prospective complexes that were evaluated by both reviewers as containing peatland permafrost were classified as likely peatland permafrost complexes, while prospective complexes with conflicting evaluations were classified as possible peatland permafrost complexes. Interpretation of peatland permafrost presence or absence was supported by field and imagery-based validation efforts at 557 prospective peatland permafrost locations, 331 of which contained peatland permafrost. Out of 2092 initial wetland complexes, 1120 were interpreted as likely containing peatland permafrost, and 186 were interpreted as possibly containing peatland permafrost. Likely peatland permafrost complexes were mostly found in lowlands within 22 km of the coastline, in locations with corresponding mean annual air temperatures of up to +1.2 °C (1980-2010). These inventory results provide an important baseline for future mapping, modelling, and climate change adaptation strategy development for the region.

Updated versions of the inventory will continue to be made available. Esri. (2023). World Imagery, https://www.arcgis.com/home/item.html?id=10df2279f9684e4a9f6a7f08febac2a9. Accessed from September 2020 to June 2023.

Data and Resources

Additional Info

Field Value
Source https://nordicana.cen.ulaval.ca/en/publication.php?doi=45762XD-1DB498A49B864CFB
Version 1.2.0
Citation Wang,Y., Way, R.G., Beer, J. 2023. Coastal Labrador peatland permafrost inventory, v. 1.2.0 (2023-2023). Nordicana D98, doi: 10.5885/45762XD-1DB498A49B864CFB.
Temporal coverage 1
Temporal coverage start
2023-06-01
Temporal coverage end
2023-06-01
Spatial coverage { "coordinates": [ -63.350159, 58.638789 ], "type": "Point" }
Station cen-whapmagoostui-kuujuarapik-research-station
Collaborator nordicana-d
Variable measured 1
Variable name
Likely and possible peatland permafrost complexes
Variable description
The dataset contains coordinates (latitude, longitude) for the centres of likely and possible peatland permafrost complexes, containing palsas and/or peat plateaus with a diameter of >2 m. Likely peatland permafrost complexes are wetlands of interest that were evaluated by two of two reviewers as being likely to contain peatland permafrost. Possible peatland permafrost complexes are wetlands of interest that were evaluated by one of two reviewers as being likely to contain peatland permafrost. Evaluations of peatland permafrost presence were performed using high-resolution satellite imagery available via Esri ArcGIS Online.
Variable unit
Variable URL
https://nordicana.cen.ulaval.ca/en/infodonnees.php?id=504
Measurement Technique
Date published
Status
Publisher 1
Publisher name
Nordicana D
Publisher URL
https://nordicana.cen.ulaval.ca/en/
Provider 1
Provider name
Centre for Nordic Studies (CEN)
Provider URL
https://www.cen.ulaval.ca/