“…At regional to global scales, carbon and nitrogen released from frozen substrates may substantially contribute to atmospheric concentrations of CH 4 , CO 2 , and N 2 O, with impacts to global biogeochemistry and climate [ Desyatkin et al ., ; Gooseff et al ., ; Grosse et al ., ; Schuur et al ., ; Tarnocai et al ., ; Walter , ; Walter et al ., ]. Locally, liberation of previously frozen substrates, organic materials, and nutrients alters the ecology of receiving streams [ Bowden et al ., 2008; Frey and McClelland , ; Gooseff et al ., ; Rozell , ], impacts sediment loads of streams and rivers [ Gooseff et al ., ; Walker and Hudson , ; Walker et al ., ], and causes ecological and hydrobiogeochemical impacts in lake ecosystems [ Kokelj et al ., 2009a; Mesquita et al ., ; Thompson et al ., ]. Vegetation within and adjacent to retrogressive thaw slump scars are also directly impacted through disturbance and succession on altered surfaces [ Lantz and Kokelj , ; Lantz et al ., ].…”