“…Polygonal ground patterns create a complex mosaic of microtopographic features with poorly drained low‐centered polygons (LCPs) surrounded by high rims and well‐drained high‐centered polygons (HCPs) surrounded by low trough as results of the annual freeze–thaw cycles across the northern Alaskan coastal plain (Hinkel et al, ; Throckmorton et al, ; Zona et al, ). Microtopography strongly affects soil water content and active layer depth (Atchley et al, ; Grant, Mekonnen, Riley, Arora, & Torn, ; Grant, Mekonnen, Riley, Wainwright, et al, ; Lu & Zhuang, ), soil temperature and thermal conductivity (Abolt et al, ; Kumar et al, ), soil pH and O 2 availability (Lipson et al, ; Zona et al, ), soil chemistry (Lipson et al, ; Newman et al, ; Semenchuk et al, ), vegetation types and canopy height (Davidson et al, ; von Fischer et al, ), and microbial community structure (Tas et al, ; Wagner et al, ). Therefore, the large spatial heterogeneities in microtopographic features are critically important for modeling and predicting the ecosystem carbon (C) exchange in Arctic tundra ecosystems.…”