Back to Search
Start Over
Exploring the relationship between peatland net carbon balance and apparent carbon accumulation rate at century to millennial time scales
- Source :
- The Holocene
- Publication Year :
- 2014
- Publisher :
- SAGE Publications, 2014.
-
Abstract
- This special issue comprising 14 articles emerged from the PAGES supported meeting: Holocene Circum Arctic Peatland Carbon Dynamics Community Wide Data Synthesis and Modeling Initiatives which took place from the 12 16 October 2013 in Bethlehem Pennsylvania. It is a precursor product of PAGES' C PEAT Working Group. ABSTRACT: Each year a peatland has an annual net carbon balance (NCB) which can be positive (net uptake) zero or negative. Over centuries to millennia this NCB accumulates as a peat profile. Contemporary peatlands can be sampled (cored) and the past apparent carbon accumulation rate (aCAR) can be determined as the quantity of peat carbon in any particular dated interval down the core profile. We use a process based peatland carbon and water cycle model to compare peatland annual NCB during millennia of peat accumulation to the contemporary estimate of aCAR resulting from this accumulation. Integrating over the entire profile the accumulated NCB must equal the aCAR but for shorter time intervals these two quantities can diverge. A climate variation/perturbation that leads to persistent slow carbon loss or negligible carbon gain through enhanced decomposition will necessarily reduce the aCAR for time periods before the climate variation/perturbation occurred. This can compromise peatland climate–carbon balance relationships inferred from joint analysis of peat cores and paleoclimate reconstructions.
- Subjects :
- Archeology
Peat
010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences
chemistry.chemical_element
Perturbation (astronomy)
Carbon gain
Carbon sequestration
Atmospheric sciences
01 natural sciences
Climate variation
Water cycle
Carbon loss
0105 earth and related environmental sciences
Earth-Surface Processes
Hydrology
Global and Planetary Change
Ecology
Paleontology
04 agricultural and veterinary sciences
15. Life on land
chemistry
13. Climate action
040103 agronomy & agriculture
0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries
Environmental science
Carbon
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 14770911 and 09596836
- Volume :
- 24
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- The Holocene
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....c40b42fc20e8dd6278114f09643a86d7