Greenhouse gas balance of a semi-natural peatbog in northern Scotland

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., a...

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Published in:Environmental Research Letters
Main Authors: P E Levy, A Gray
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IOP Publishing 2015-01-01
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/10/9/094019
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author P E Levy
A Gray
author_facet P E Levy
A Gray
author_sort P E Levy
collection DOAJ
container_title Environmental Research Letters
description 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 CO _2 over all the measurement years (mean net ecosystem exchange (NEE) of −114 g C m ^−2 y ^−1 ), similar in magnitude to other measurements in the boreal and tundra zones, and rather higher than the existing measurements at other sites in the UK and Ireland. Generally, the NEE of CO _2 was relatively insensitive to moderate inter-annual variations in weather. Non-CO _2 losses comprised 11% of gross primary production, mainly from methane emissions. Accounting for these terms, the net ecosystem carbon balance was −50 g C-CO _2 eq m ^−2 y ^−1 . The contemporary carbon sink was larger than estimates from local peat cores, based on peat accumulation over the last several thousand years, but in the middle of the range of estimates which used spheroidal carbonaceous particles to estimate peat accumulation rates over the last century.
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spelling doaj-art-b44d0c6cf42e48bcb5fbf073588901e32025-08-19T21:46:50ZengIOP PublishingEnvironmental Research Letters1748-93262015-01-0110909401910.1088/1748-9326/10/9/094019Greenhouse gas balance of a semi-natural peatbog in northern ScotlandP E Levy0A Gray1Centre of Ecology and Hydrology, Bush Estate, Penicuik, EH26 0QB, UKCentre of Ecology and Hydrology, Bush Estate, Penicuik, EH26 0QB, UKNorthern 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 CO _2 over all the measurement years (mean net ecosystem exchange (NEE) of −114 g C m ^−2 y ^−1 ), similar in magnitude to other measurements in the boreal and tundra zones, and rather higher than the existing measurements at other sites in the UK and Ireland. Generally, the NEE of CO _2 was relatively insensitive to moderate inter-annual variations in weather. Non-CO _2 losses comprised 11% of gross primary production, mainly from methane emissions. Accounting for these terms, the net ecosystem carbon balance was −50 g C-CO _2 eq m ^−2 y ^−1 . The contemporary carbon sink was larger than estimates from local peat cores, based on peat accumulation over the last several thousand years, but in the middle of the range of estimates which used spheroidal carbonaceous particles to estimate peat accumulation rates over the last century.https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/10/9/094019carbon dioxide exchangemethanenet ecosystem exchangeCO2 fluxpeat
spellingShingle P E Levy
A Gray
Greenhouse gas balance of a semi-natural peatbog in northern Scotland
carbon dioxide exchange
methane
net ecosystem exchange
CO2 flux
peat
title Greenhouse gas balance of a semi-natural peatbog in northern Scotland
title_full Greenhouse gas balance of a semi-natural peatbog in northern Scotland
title_fullStr Greenhouse gas balance of a semi-natural peatbog in northern Scotland
title_full_unstemmed Greenhouse gas balance of a semi-natural peatbog in northern Scotland
title_short Greenhouse gas balance of a semi-natural peatbog in northern Scotland
title_sort greenhouse gas balance of a semi natural peatbog in northern scotland
topic carbon dioxide exchange
methane
net ecosystem exchange
CO2 flux
peat
url https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/10/9/094019
work_keys_str_mv AT pelevy greenhousegasbalanceofaseminaturalpeatboginnorthernscotland
AT agray greenhousegasbalanceofaseminaturalpeatboginnorthernscotland