| Literature DB >> 26607672 |
Adam J Heathcote1,2, N John Anderson3, Yves T Prairie1, Daniel R Engstrom2, Paul A del Giorgio1.
Abstract
Northern forests are important ecosystems for carbon (C) cycling and lakes within them process and bury large amounts of organic-C. Current burial estimates are poorly constrained and may discount other shifts in organic-C burial driven by global change. Here we analyse a suite of northern lakes to determine trends in organic-C burial throughout the Anthropocene. We found burial rates increased significantly over the last century and are up to five times greater than previous estimates. Despite a correlation with temperature, warming alone did not explain the increase in burial, suggesting the importance of other drivers including atmospherically deposited reactive nitrogen. Upscaling mean lake burial rates for each time period to global northern forests yields up to 4.5 Pg C accumulated in the last 100 years--20% of the total burial over the Holocene. Our results indicate that lakes will become increasingly important for C burial under future global change scenarios.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26607672 PMCID: PMC4674672 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms10016
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Figure 1Organic-C burial in northern lakes.
(a) Map of North America with lakes included in this study coloured by region. The boreal and northern temperate forest biome (referred to as northern forest in this study) is shaded in green. Scale bar, 2,000 km. (b) Mean change in organic-C (ΔOC) burial rates between time periods for lakes in this study for all regions (n=101), British Columbia (n=10), the Great Lakes Region (n=13), Minnesota (n=39), Newfoundland (n=4), Ontario (n=3), Québec (n=28) and southeast Alaska (n=4). Error bars represent the 95% confidence interval around the mean and those that do not overlap zero represent a significant positive increase (t-test, P<0.05). (c) OC burial versus time, binned by 20-year intervals, from 1840 to 2000 AD. All dated sections older than 1840 and younger than 2000 AD were combined into two bins due to a low density of points for those time periods. The median for all bins was fit with a LOWESS smoother (red line), to show the general trend in organic-C burial over time. Boxes represent the interquartile range (IQR) with the median shown as a black bar. Whiskers represent the minimum/maximum value within × 1.5 the IQR with points outside plotted as black dots. (d) LOWESS smoother for OC burial from all lakes in this study versus time (red line) and atmospherically deposited nitrate concentrations (teal line) measured from the Greenland Ice Sheet. Greenland ice core data modified from Hastings et al.20.
Regional and combined averages (and s.d.) for organic-C burial before and following the Anthropocene.
| British Columbia (CA) | 1.2 (0.9) | 2.5 (0.5) | 3.5 (1.3) |
| Great Lakes (USA) | 10.8 (7.3) | 13.9 (7.2) | 19.8 (13.4) |
| Minnesota (USA) | 9.8 (4.3) | 13.4 (6.4) | 15.4 (5.7) |
| Newfoundland (CA) | 8.4 (7.1) | 11.9 (10.7) | 15.7 (12.3) |
| Ontario (CA) | 11.0 (2.9) | 12.6 (4.5) | 11.4 (5.3) |
| Quebec (CA) | 10.2 (10.3) | 11.5 (11.6) | 16.7 (13.9) |
| SE Alaska (USA) | 9.8 (1.6) | 9.7 (1.6) | 12.5 (3.1) |
| All Regions | 9.5 (5.8) | 12.3 (7.6) | 15.0 (9.4) |
C, carbon.
Figure 2Geographic drivers of organic-C burial.
Organic-C burial rates for 101 northern lakes over a latitudinal (a) and temperature (b) gradient. The colour of the points represents three different time periods: before 1900 AD (orange), 1900–1950 AD (green) and 1950 to present day (blue). Solid lines represent least square regressions for each time period and dashed lines represent previously estimated Holocene burial rates for Finland2 (below; 2.7 g C m−2 per year) and Québec13 (above; 3.8 g C m−2 per year).