Articles | Volume 20, issue 2
https://doi.org/10.5194/tc-20-1001-2026
© Author(s) 2026. This work is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
Forest disturbances and their impact on ground surface temperatures in permafrost-underlain forest in central Mongolia
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- Final revised paper (published on 11 Feb 2026)
- Preprint (discussion started on 27 Jun 2025)
Interactive discussion
Status: closed
Comment types: AC – author | RC – referee | CC – community | EC – editor | CEC – chief editor
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RC1: 'Comment on egusphere-2025-2366', Anonymous Referee #1, 18 Jul 2025
- AC3: 'Reply on RC1', Robin B. Zweigel, 23 Oct 2025
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RC2: 'Comment on egusphere-2025-2366', Anonymous Referee #2, 24 Sep 2025
- AC2: 'Reply on RC2', Robin B. Zweigel, 23 Oct 2025
- AC1: 'Reply on RC1', Robin B. Zweigel, 23 Oct 2025
- EC1: 'Comment on egusphere-2025-2366', Krystyna Kozioł, 24 Nov 2025
Peer review completion
AR – Author's response | RR – Referee report | ED – Editor decision | EF – Editorial file upload
ED: Publish subject to revisions (further review by editor and referees) (10 Nov 2025) by Krystyna Kozioł
AR by Robin B. Zweigel on behalf of the Authors (11 Nov 2025)
Author's response
Author's tracked changes
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ED: Referee Nomination & Report Request started (11 Nov 2025) by Krystyna Kozioł
RR by Piotr Owczarek (23 Dec 2025)
ED: Publish subject to minor revisions (review by editor) (23 Dec 2025) by Krystyna Kozioł
AR by Robin B. Zweigel on behalf of the Authors (28 Dec 2025)
Author's response
Author's tracked changes
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ED: Publish as is (30 Dec 2025) by Krystyna Kozioł
AR by Robin B. Zweigel on behalf of the Authors (01 Jan 2026)
Author's response
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Ground surface temperature (GST) is a crucial factor for permafrost research and predictive mapping. However, the current study requires substantial improvements in the following aspects:
Mechanistic Analysis
Permafrost Context
Line 40: Such disruptions? The above text does not mention such disruptions.
Lines 45-49: Many studies have also examined the changes in winter in the permafrost region.
For Introduction: It is essential to highlight the significance of ground surface temperatures (GSTs) research in the introduction, particularly in the context of permafrost. Studying GST can reveal its connection with permafrost, such as whether it can reflect the dynamic changes in permafrost conditions.
Line 101: What is A1?
Figures 1 and 2: The general title for all figures should be provided first, followed by individual captions for each subplot.
2.1 Site description: It is recommended to specify the permafrost classification characteristics and thermal regime parameters in the study area. For instance: Permafrost type: continuous/discontinuous/sporadic/isolated patches. Mean annual ground temperature (MAGT) range, active layer thickness, permafrost thickness.
Line 134: What are the start and end months of the hydrological year?
Line 185: December represents the early snow accumulation phase, while March marks the end of winter when snow begins to melt. An additional snow measurement should be conducted in February during the stable snow cover period.
Figure 3: The authors have two years of data, so seasonal and annual averages should be presented with error bars. These error bars could help reveal certain patterns in the data. The authors have not provided complete figure titles for any of the figures, only including subfigure captions.
Line 272: Table C2?
Lines 285-286: What’s the reason? Such a result seems counterintuitive.
Lines 291-296: This content has already been mentioned in the Introduction and Study Area sections, and its repetition here is redundant.
Lines 367-368: What is the reason? Why has summer disappeared?
Line 403: The interference may not necessarily lead to an increase in the MAGST, but it could still cause a significant rise in summer GST—it's just that the MAGST is offset by the decrease in winter GST.
Line 417: Why is that?
Lines 415-429: Different vegetation cover can lead to changes in wind speed, and does wind speed affect snow cover? I believe livestock trampling might have some impact, but it’s definitely not the main factor.
Line 433-434, Table C2: How do you determine whether livestock trampling is sparse or dense? By the number of hoofprints? But could there be cases where heavy trampling is later covered by snow?
Line 290:The authors should construct a relational diagram between all factors and GST (Ground Surface Temperature), calculate the contribution rate of each factor to GST, and then discuss which one is the dominant influencing factor. Otherwise, the discussion can only superficially address whether the factors affect GST and which one plays a major role. Due to the presence of anthropogenic factors such as livestock trampling, it is impossible to analyze GST differences caused solely by variations in vegetation cover.
Line 464: I believe such a conclusion is unreasonable. Livestock trampling compacts snow cover, reducing its thickness while increasing its density. However, this factor has not been quantified, nor has the influence of snow layers—another critical aspect—been quantitatively assessed.
Line 475: The understory vegetation in logged or dead forest plots is dense, resulting in a Plant Area Index (PAI) similar to that of intact forests. However, their effects on ground surface temperature (GST) still differ. Relying solely on PAI may fail to distinguish the varying impacts of different vegetation covers on GST.