Peatland ecosystems store about 500-600 Pg of organic carbon, largely accumulated since the last glaciation. Whether they continue to sequester carbon or release it as greenhouse gases, perhaps in large amounts, is important in Earth's temperature dynamics. Given both ages and depths of numerous dated sample peatlands, their rate of carbon sequestration can be estimated throughout the Holocene. Here we use average values for carbon content per unit volume, the geographical extent of peatlands, and ecological models of peatland establishment and growth, to reconstruct the time-trajectory of peatland carbon sequestration in North America and project it into the future. Peatlands there contain ~163 Pg of carbon. Ignoring effects of climate cha...
The majority of northern peatlands were initiated during the Holocene. Owing to their mass imbalance...
The development of northern high-latitude peatlands played an important role in the carbon (C) balan...
Peatlands can buffer the impact of external perturbations, but can also rapidly shift to a new ecosy...
Peatlands are a major terrestrial carbon store and a persistent natural carbon sink during the Holoc...
Significance During the Holocene (11,600 y ago to present), northern peatlands accumulated signif...
Each year, a peatland has an annual net carbon balance (NCB), which can be positive (net uptake), ze...
The majority of northern peatlands were initiated during the Holocene. Owing to their mass imbalance...
Peatlands are a large carbon reservoir. Yet the quantification of their carbon stock still has a lar...
The 21st century climate change and land-use pressure are likely to subject northern peatlands to cl...
Globally, peatlands represent a large Carbon stock, estimated at 397-455 Pg carbon. Most of this car...
Northern peatlands have been a persistent natural carbon sink since the Last Glacial Maximum. The co...
AbstractPeatlands are an important component of the Holocene global carbon (C) cycle and the rate of...
Peatlands have been important terrestrial carbon reservoirs throughout the Holocene, yet whether the...
Northern peatlands have accumulated ~500 Pg of carbon (C) over millennia, and contributed to a net c...
The majority of northern peatlands were initiated during the Holocene. Owing to their mass imbalance...
The development of northern high-latitude peatlands played an important role in the carbon (C) balan...
Peatlands can buffer the impact of external perturbations, but can also rapidly shift to a new ecosy...
Peatlands are a major terrestrial carbon store and a persistent natural carbon sink during the Holoc...
Significance During the Holocene (11,600 y ago to present), northern peatlands accumulated signif...
Each year, a peatland has an annual net carbon balance (NCB), which can be positive (net uptake), ze...
The majority of northern peatlands were initiated during the Holocene. Owing to their mass imbalance...
Peatlands are a large carbon reservoir. Yet the quantification of their carbon stock still has a lar...
The 21st century climate change and land-use pressure are likely to subject northern peatlands to cl...
Globally, peatlands represent a large Carbon stock, estimated at 397-455 Pg carbon. Most of this car...
Northern peatlands have been a persistent natural carbon sink since the Last Glacial Maximum. The co...
AbstractPeatlands are an important component of the Holocene global carbon (C) cycle and the rate of...
Peatlands have been important terrestrial carbon reservoirs throughout the Holocene, yet whether the...
Northern peatlands have accumulated ~500 Pg of carbon (C) over millennia, and contributed to a net c...
The majority of northern peatlands were initiated during the Holocene. Owing to their mass imbalance...
The development of northern high-latitude peatlands played an important role in the carbon (C) balan...
Peatlands can buffer the impact of external perturbations, but can also rapidly shift to a new ecosy...