Peatlands and their carbon dynamics in northern high latitudes from 1990 to 2300: a process-based biogeochemistry model analysis
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Published:2023-01-16
Issue:1
Volume:20
Page:251-270
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ISSN:1726-4189
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Container-title:Biogeosciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Biogeosciences
Author:
Zhao BailuORCID, Zhuang QianlaiORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Northern peatlands have been a large C sink during the Holocene,
but whether they will keep being a C sink under future climate change is
uncertain. This study simulates the responses of northern peatlands to
future climate until 2300 with a Peatland version Terrestrial Ecosystem
Model (PTEM). The simulations are driven with two sets of CMIP5 climate data
(IPSL-CM5A-LR and bcc-csm1-1) under three warming scenarios (RCPs 2.6, 4.5 and
8.5). Peatland area expansion, shrinkage, and C accumulation and
decomposition are modeled. In the 21st century, northern peatlands are
projected to be a C source of 1.2–13.3 Pg C under all climate scenarios
except for RCP 2.6 of bcc-csm1-1 (a sink of 0.8 Pg C). During 2100–2300,
northern peatlands under all scenarios are a C source under IPSL-CM5A-LR
scenarios, being larger sources than bcc-csm1-1 scenarios (5.9–118.3 vs.
0.7–87.6 Pg C). C sources are attributed to (1) the peatland water table depth
(WTD) becoming deeper and permafrost thaw increasing decomposition rate; (2) net primary production (NPP) not increasing much as climate warms because
peat drying suppresses net N mineralization; and (3) as WTD deepens,
peatlands switching from moss–herbaceous dominated to moss–woody dominated,
while woody plants require more N for productivity. Under IPSL-CM5A-LR
scenarios, northern peatlands remain as a C sink until the pan-Arctic annual
temperature reaches −2.6 to −2.89 ∘C, while this threshold is −2.09
to −2.35 ∘C under bcc-csm1-1 scenarios. This study predicts a
northern peatland sink-to-source shift in around 2050, earlier than previous
estimates of after 2100, and emphasizes the vulnerability of northern
peatlands to climate change.
Funder
National Science Foundation
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
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