泥炭
环境科学
碳汇
固碳
碳循环
气候变化
温室气体
初级生产
永久冻土
全球变暖
碳纤维
自然地理学
生产力
大气科学
气候学
水文学(农业)
生态学
二氧化碳
生态系统
地质学
地理
宏观经济学
复合材料
经济
岩土工程
材料科学
复合数
生物
作者
Dan J. Charman,David W. Beilman,Maarten Blaauw,Robert K. Booth,Simon Brewer,Frank M. Chambers,J. Andrés Christen,Angela Gallego‐Sala,Sandy P. Harrison,Paul Hughes,Stephen T. Jackson,Atte Korhola,Dmitri Mauquoy,Fraser Mitchell,I. Colin Prentice,M. van der Linden,François De Vleeschouwer,Zicheng Yu,Jukka Alm,Ilka E. Bauer
出处
期刊:Biogeosciences
[Copernicus Publications]
日期:2013-02-08
卷期号:10 (2): 929-944
被引量:330
标识
DOI:10.5194/bg-10-929-2013
摘要
Abstract. Peatlands are a major terrestrial carbon store and a persistent natural carbon sink during the Holocene, but there is considerable uncertainty over the fate of peatland carbon in a changing climate. It is generally assumed that higher temperatures will increase peat decay, causing a positive feedback to climate warming and contributing to the global positive carbon cycle feedback. Here we use a new extensive database of peat profiles across northern high latitudes to examine spatial and temporal patterns of carbon accumulation over the past millennium. Opposite to expectations, our results indicate a small negative carbon cycle feedback from past changes in the long-term accumulation rates of northern peatlands. Total carbon accumulated over the last 1000 yr is linearly related to contemporary growing season length and photosynthetically active radiation, suggesting that variability in net primary productivity is more important than decomposition in determining long-term carbon accumulation. Furthermore, northern peatland carbon sequestration rate declined over the climate transition from the Medieval Climate Anomaly (MCA) to the Little Ice Age (LIA), probably because of lower LIA temperatures combined with increased cloudiness suppressing net primary productivity. Other factors including changing moisture status, peatland distribution, fire, nitrogen deposition, permafrost thaw and methane emissions will also influence future peatland carbon cycle feedbacks, but our data suggest that the carbon sequestration rate could increase over many areas of northern peatlands in a warmer future.
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