Literature DB >> 27362936

Rapid carbon loss and slow recovery following permafrost thaw in boreal peatlands.

Miriam C Jones1, Jennifer Harden2, Jonathan O'Donnell3, Kristen Manies2, Torre Jorgenson4, Claire Treat2,5, Stephanie Ewing6.   

Abstract

Permafrost peatlands store one-third of the total carbon (C) in the atmosphere and are increasingly vulnerable to thaw as high-latitude temperatures warm. Large uncertainties remain about C dynamics following permafrost thaw in boreal peatlands. We used a chronosequence approach to measure C stocks in forested permafrost plateaus (forest) and thawed permafrost bogs, ranging in thaw age from young (<10 years) to old (>100 years) from two interior Alaska chronosequences. Permafrost originally aggraded simultaneously with peat accumulation (syngenetic permafrost) at both sites. We found that upon thaw, C loss of the forest peat C is equivalent to ~30% of the initial forest C stock and is directly proportional to the prethaw C stocks. Our model results indicate that permafrost thaw turned these peatlands into net C sources to the atmosphere for a decade following thaw, after which post-thaw bog peat accumulation returned sites to net C sinks. It can take multiple centuries to millennia for a site to recover its prethaw C stocks; the amount of time needed for them to regain their prethaw C stocks is governed by the amount of C that accumulated prior to thaw. Consequently, these findings show that older peatlands will take longer to recover prethaw C stocks, whereas younger peatlands will exceed prethaw stocks in a matter of centuries. We conclude that the loss of sporadic and discontinuous permafrost by 2100 could result in a loss of up to 24 Pg of deep C from permafrost peatlands. Published 2016. This article is a U.S. Government work and is in the public domain in the USA.

Entities:  

Keywords:  boreal; carbon; collapse-scar bog; peatland; permafrost; permafrost thaw

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Year:  2016        PMID: 27362936     DOI: 10.1111/gcb.13403

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Glob Chang Biol        ISSN: 1354-1013            Impact factor:   10.863


  3 in total

1.  Large-scale probabilistic identification of boreal peatlands using Google Earth Engine, open-access satellite data, and machine learning.

Authors:  Evan Ross DeLancey; Jahan Kariyeva; Jason T Bried; Jennifer N Hird
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2019-06-17       Impact factor: 3.240

2.  Recent climate change has driven divergent hydrological shifts in high-latitude peatlands.

Authors:  Hui Zhang; Minna Väliranta; Graeme T Swindles; Marco A Aquino-López; Donal Mullan; Ning Tan; Matthew Amesbury; Kirill V Babeshko; Kunshan Bao; Anatoly Bobrov; Viktor Chernyshov; Marissa A Davies; Andrei-Cosmin Diaconu; Angelica Feurdean; Sarah A Finkelstein; Michelle Garneau; Zhengtang Guo; Miriam C Jones; Martin Kay; Eric S Klein; Mariusz Lamentowicz; Gabriel Magnan; Katarzyna Marcisz; Natalia Mazei; Yuri Mazei; Richard Payne; Nicolas Pelletier; Sanna R Piilo; Steve Pratte; Thomas Roland; Damir Saldaev; William Shotyk; Thomas G Sim; Thomas J Sloan; Michał Słowiński; Julie Talbot; Liam Taylor; Andrey N Tsyganov; Sebastian Wetterich; Wei Xing; Yan Zhao
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2022-08-24       Impact factor: 17.694

3.  Wildfire as a major driver of recent permafrost thaw in boreal peatlands.

Authors:  Carolyn M Gibson; Laura E Chasmer; Dan K Thompson; William L Quinton; Mike D Flannigan; David Olefeldt
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2018-08-02       Impact factor: 14.919

  3 in total

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