International audiencePeatlands at high latitudes have accumulated >400 Pg carbon (C) because saturated soil and cold temperatures suppress C decomposition. This substantial amount of C in Arctic and Boreal peatlands is potentially subject to increased decomposition if the water table (WT) decreases due to climate change, including permafrost thaw-related drying. Here, we optimize a version of the Organizing Carbon and Hydrology In Dynamic Ecosystems model (ORCHIDEE-PCH4) using site-specific observations to investigate changes in CO2 and CH4 fluxes as well as C stock responses to an experimentally manipulated decrease of WT at six northern peatlands. The unmanipulated control peatlands, with the WT 2 kg C m−2 over 100 years when WT is lower...
<div><p>A large portion of the global carbon pool is stored in peatlands, which are sensitive to a c...
The annual net primary productivity of northern peatlands is relatively small compared to that of ma...
International audienceDue to the wet and anoxic specific environmental conditions, which reduce the ...
International audiencePeatlands at high latitudes have accumulated >400 Pg carbon (C) because satura...
International audienceThe function of peatlands as a large carbon (C) reservoir results from the net...
Peatlands are important components of boreal and subarctic landscapes, and can be regionally importa...
Since the last deglaciation, 300-500 Pg carbon have accumulated in northern peatlands (346 mill. ha)...
Peatland ecosystems store between 200 and 450 Gt C (1015 gC). It is estimated that peatlands constit...
Permafrost peatlands are biogeochemical hot spots in the Arctic as they store vast amounts of carbon...
A small imbalance in plant productivity and decomposition accounts for the carbon (C) accumulation c...
Palsa mires, nutrient poor permafrost peatlands common in subarctic regions, store a significant amo...
International audiencePrecipitation patterns are becoming increasingly extreme, particularly at nort...
Permafrost stores globally significant amounts of carbon (C) which may start to decompose and be rel...
The response of peatlands to changes in the climatic water budget is crucial to predicting potential...
<div><p>A large portion of the global carbon pool is stored in peatlands, which are sensitive to a c...
The annual net primary productivity of northern peatlands is relatively small compared to that of ma...
International audienceDue to the wet and anoxic specific environmental conditions, which reduce the ...
International audiencePeatlands at high latitudes have accumulated >400 Pg carbon (C) because satura...
International audienceThe function of peatlands as a large carbon (C) reservoir results from the net...
Peatlands are important components of boreal and subarctic landscapes, and can be regionally importa...
Since the last deglaciation, 300-500 Pg carbon have accumulated in northern peatlands (346 mill. ha)...
Peatland ecosystems store between 200 and 450 Gt C (1015 gC). It is estimated that peatlands constit...
Permafrost peatlands are biogeochemical hot spots in the Arctic as they store vast amounts of carbon...
A small imbalance in plant productivity and decomposition accounts for the carbon (C) accumulation c...
Palsa mires, nutrient poor permafrost peatlands common in subarctic regions, store a significant amo...
International audiencePrecipitation patterns are becoming increasingly extreme, particularly at nort...
Permafrost stores globally significant amounts of carbon (C) which may start to decompose and be rel...
The response of peatlands to changes in the climatic water budget is crucial to predicting potential...
<div><p>A large portion of the global carbon pool is stored in peatlands, which are sensitive to a c...
The annual net primary productivity of northern peatlands is relatively small compared to that of ma...
International audienceDue to the wet and anoxic specific environmental conditions, which reduce the ...