Peatland catchments store vast amounts of carbon. Humic lakes and pools are the primary receptacles for terrigenous carbon in these meta-ecosystems, representing sequestration hotspots; boreal lakes alone store ca. 120 Pg C. But little is known about the mechanisms that preserve aquatic carbon stocks. Here, we determined the regulatory pathway of decomposition in relation to �traditional� limitations, namely anoxia, decay inhibiting compounds, low nutrients and acidity, using in vitro manipulation, mesocosms and natural gradients. We show that anoxia represents a powerful hierarchical preservation mechanism affecting all major limitations on decomposition and recapturing carbon that would otherwise escape from peatlands. Oxygen constrai...
Organic matter decomposition plays a major role in the cycling of carbon (C) and nutrients in terres...
Peatlands contain one-third of soil carbon (C), mostly buried in deep, saturated anoxic zones (catot...
Peatlands can buffer the impact of external perturbations, but can also rapidly shift to a new ecosy...
Lakes are highly relevant players in the global carbon cycle as they can store large amounts of orga...
Restoration of drained peatlands has been promoted to reduce gaseous and aquatic carbon losses; ho...
Globally important carbon (C) stores in northern peatlands are vulnerable to oxidation in a changing...
Many lakes worldwide are supersaturated with CO2, making them net emitters of CO2 to the atmosphere....
Sediments in boreal lakes are important components of the carbon cycle because they receive and stor...
Peatlands, which store one third of the terrestrial carbon (C), are subject to large disturbances un...
Carbon burial is an important process, not only as a carbon sink but also as a control mechanism for...
Extreme summer droughts are expected to occur more often in the future in NW Europe due to climate c...
Peatlands represent massive global carbon (C) pools and sinks. Carbon accumulation depends on the ra...
International audiencePeatlands at high latitudes have accumulated >400 Pg carbon (C) because satura...
Peatlands store globally significant amounts of carbon and are important sources of the greenhouse g...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. October 2009. Major: Ecology, Evolution and Behavior. Ad...
Organic matter decomposition plays a major role in the cycling of carbon (C) and nutrients in terres...
Peatlands contain one-third of soil carbon (C), mostly buried in deep, saturated anoxic zones (catot...
Peatlands can buffer the impact of external perturbations, but can also rapidly shift to a new ecosy...
Lakes are highly relevant players in the global carbon cycle as they can store large amounts of orga...
Restoration of drained peatlands has been promoted to reduce gaseous and aquatic carbon losses; ho...
Globally important carbon (C) stores in northern peatlands are vulnerable to oxidation in a changing...
Many lakes worldwide are supersaturated with CO2, making them net emitters of CO2 to the atmosphere....
Sediments in boreal lakes are important components of the carbon cycle because they receive and stor...
Peatlands, which store one third of the terrestrial carbon (C), are subject to large disturbances un...
Carbon burial is an important process, not only as a carbon sink but also as a control mechanism for...
Extreme summer droughts are expected to occur more often in the future in NW Europe due to climate c...
Peatlands represent massive global carbon (C) pools and sinks. Carbon accumulation depends on the ra...
International audiencePeatlands at high latitudes have accumulated >400 Pg carbon (C) because satura...
Peatlands store globally significant amounts of carbon and are important sources of the greenhouse g...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. October 2009. Major: Ecology, Evolution and Behavior. Ad...
Organic matter decomposition plays a major role in the cycling of carbon (C) and nutrients in terres...
Peatlands contain one-third of soil carbon (C), mostly buried in deep, saturated anoxic zones (catot...
Peatlands can buffer the impact of external perturbations, but can also rapidly shift to a new ecosy...