Northern peatlands have been accumulating organic matter since the start of the Holocene, and are now a substantial store of terrestrial carbon. However, their current status as carbon sinks is less clear, because of the possible effects of climate change, air pollution, grazing and drainage etc., and the difficulties of accurate measurement with suitable time resolution. Such measurements are particularly lacking in the UK. Here, we present multi-year eddy covariance measurements of the carbon fluxes at a relatively undisturbed ombrotrophic blanket bog in the Flow Country of northern Scotland. The site consistently acted as a moderate sink for CO2 over all the measurement years (mean net ecosystem exchange (NEE) of −114 g C m−2 y−1), simil...
The net impact of greenhouse gas emissions from degraded peatland environments on national Inventori...
Peatlands cover approximately 2-3% of the world’s land area yet represent approximately a third of t...
Peatlands cover between 10 – 15 % of the UK landmass, yet contain 50 % of the UK soil carbon store....
Peatlands are one of the largest terrestrial stores of carbon. Carbon exchange in peatlands is often...
The retention of peatland carbon (C) and the ability to continue to draw down and store C from the a...
The retention of peatland carbon (C) and the ability to continue to draw down and store C from the a...
A 'display' at the EGU General Assembly 2020. Peatlands North of 45˚ represent one of the largest te...
The retention of peatland carbon (C) and the ability to continue to draw down and store C from the ...
Peatlands store disproportionately large amounts of soil carbon relative to other terrestrial ecosys...
Northern peatlands are important in the global carbon (C) cycle as they help regulate local, regiona...
Quantifying the sink strength of northern hemisphere peatlands requires measurements or realistic es...
This paper provides information on the impact of recent climate change on carbon sequestration in pe...
The response of peatland carbon accumulation to climate can be complex, with internal feedbacks and ...
Land–atmosphere exchange of carbon dioxide (CO2) in peatlands exhibits marked seasonal and inter-ann...
Peatland ecosystems have been important global carbon sinks throughout the Holocene. Most of the res...
The net impact of greenhouse gas emissions from degraded peatland environments on national Inventori...
Peatlands cover approximately 2-3% of the world’s land area yet represent approximately a third of t...
Peatlands cover between 10 – 15 % of the UK landmass, yet contain 50 % of the UK soil carbon store....
Peatlands are one of the largest terrestrial stores of carbon. Carbon exchange in peatlands is often...
The retention of peatland carbon (C) and the ability to continue to draw down and store C from the a...
The retention of peatland carbon (C) and the ability to continue to draw down and store C from the a...
A 'display' at the EGU General Assembly 2020. Peatlands North of 45˚ represent one of the largest te...
The retention of peatland carbon (C) and the ability to continue to draw down and store C from the ...
Peatlands store disproportionately large amounts of soil carbon relative to other terrestrial ecosys...
Northern peatlands are important in the global carbon (C) cycle as they help regulate local, regiona...
Quantifying the sink strength of northern hemisphere peatlands requires measurements or realistic es...
This paper provides information on the impact of recent climate change on carbon sequestration in pe...
The response of peatland carbon accumulation to climate can be complex, with internal feedbacks and ...
Land–atmosphere exchange of carbon dioxide (CO2) in peatlands exhibits marked seasonal and inter-ann...
Peatland ecosystems have been important global carbon sinks throughout the Holocene. Most of the res...
The net impact of greenhouse gas emissions from degraded peatland environments on national Inventori...
Peatlands cover approximately 2-3% of the world’s land area yet represent approximately a third of t...
Peatlands cover between 10 – 15 % of the UK landmass, yet contain 50 % of the UK soil carbon store....