Current disturbance and the diminishing peatland carbon sink
- 12 June 2002
- journal article
- Published by American Geophysical Union (AGU) in Geophysical Research Letters
- Vol. 29 (11)
- https://doi.org/10.1029/2001gl014000
Abstract
Cumulative impacts of disturbances on peatland carbon must be understood to predict future soil carbon stocks, yet the vulnerability and response of peatlands to disturbance have been neglected. We provide the first regional‐scale assessment of peatland carbon storage across 1.7 million km2 of western boreal land. We estimate that disturbances, mainly fire, release approximately 6460 ± 930 GgCyr−1 to the atmosphere. Concurrently, disturbances reduce carbon uptake in continental peatlands by 85% compared to a no‐disturbance scenario. A 17% increase in the area of peatland burned annually and the intensity of organic matter combustion would convert these peatlands into a regional net source of carbon to the atmosphere. Peatlands widely are considered to represent a northern carbon sink, however, we suggest reevaluation of this paradigm for continental boreal regions.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- A direct approach to quantifying organic matter lost as a result of peatland wildfireCanadian Journal of Forest Research, 2001
- Fluxes of Methane and Carbon Dioxide on eat-mining Areas in SwedenAMBIO, 2000
- The changing landscape of Canada's western boreal forest: the current dynamics of permafrostCanadian Journal of Forest Research, 2000
- The charcoal effect in Boreal forests: mechanisms and ecological consequencesOecologia, 1998
- Effects of fires on carbon cycling in North American boreal peatlandsEnvironmental Reviews, 1998
- Sensitivity of Boreal Forest Carbon Balance to Soil ThawScience, 1998
- Season‐long measurement of carbon dioxide exchange in a boreal fenJournal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, 1997
- Seasonal trends in energy, water, and carbon dioxide fluxes at a northern boreal wetlandJournal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, 1997
- Rapid response of greenhouse gas emission to early spring thaw in a subarctic mire as shown by micrometeorological techniquesGeophysical Research Letters, 1997
- The Bog Landforms of Continental Western Canada in Relation to Climate and Permafrost PatternsArctic and Alpine Research, 1994