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Contrasting vulnerability of drained tropical and high-latitude peatlands to fluvial loss of stored carbon

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posted on 2015-01-14, 12:25 authored by Chris D. Evans, Susan E. Page, Tim Jones, Sam Moore, Vincent Gauci, Raija Laiho, Jakub Hruska, Tim E. H Allott, Michael F. Billett, Ed Tipping, Chris Freeman, Mark H. Garnett
Carbon sequestration and storage in peatlands rely on consistently high water tables. Anthropogenic pressures including drainage, burning, land conversion for agriculture, timber, and biofuel production, cause loss of pressures including drainage, burning, land conversion for agriculture, timber, and biofuel production, cause loss of peat-forming vegetation and exposure of previously anaerobic peat to aerobic decomposition. This can shift peatlands from net CO[subscript 2] sinks to large CO[subscript 2] sources, releasing carbon held for millennia. Peatlands also export significant quantities of carbon via fluvial pathways, mainly as dissolved organic carbon (DOC). We analyzed radiocarbon ([superscript 14]C) levels of DOC in drainage water from multiple peatlands in Europe and Southeast Asia, to infer differences in the age of carbon lost from intact and drained systems. In most cases, drainage led to increased release of older carbon from the peat profile but with marked differences related to peat type. Very low DOC-[superscript 14]C levels in runoff from drained tropical peatlands indicate loss of very old (centuries to millennia) stored peat carbon. High-latitude peatlands appear more resilient to drainage; [superscript 14]C measurements from UK blanket bogs suggest that exported DOC remains young (<50 years) despite drainage. Boreal and temperate fens and raised bogs in Finland and the Czech Republic showed intermediate sensitivity. We attribute observed differences to physical and climatic differences between peatlands, in particular, hydraulic conductivity and temperature, as well as the extent of disturbance associated with drainage, notably land use changes in the tropics. Data from the UK Peak District, an area where air pollution and intensive land management have triggered Sphagnum loss and peat erosion, suggest that additional anthropogenic pressures may trigger fluvial loss of much older (>500 year) carbon in high-latitude systems. Rewetting at least partially offsets drainage effects on DOC age.

History

Citation

Global Biogeochemical Cycles, 2014, 28 (11), pp. 1215 - 1234

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/Department of Geography/Physical Geography

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Global Biogeochemical Cycles

Publisher

American Geophysical Union

issn

0886-6236

eissn

1944-9224

Copyright date

2014

Available date

2015-06-13

Publisher version

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/2013GB004782/abstract;jsessionid=BDA8651384C26D69327AE6F0CE2D526C.f01t04

Language

en

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