4.6 Article

Consequences of Increased Variation in Peatland Hydrology for Carbon Storage: Legacy Effects of Drought and Flood in a Boreal Fen Ecosystem

Journal

FRONTIERS IN EARTH SCIENCE
Volume 8, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/feart.2020.577746

Keywords

boreal; peat; climate change; carbon dioxide; dissolved organic matter; DOM; spectroscopy; algae

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [DEB LTREB-1354370, DEB-1651195, DEB-0425328, DEB-0724514, DEB-0830997]
  2. NSF [DEB-0620579]
  3. USDA Forest Service Pacific Northwest Research Grant [PNW01-JV11261952-231]
  4. U.S.D.A. Forest Service, Northern Research Station (Houghton, MI, United States)
  5. Bonanza Creek LTER site

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This study investigated the relationship between algal biomass and the cycling of carbon in boreal rich-fen peatlands, finding that algal production plays a significant role in regulating carbon cycling during flooding periods. The pre-flooding drainage conditions were found to determine the carbon sink-strength of these ecosystems, with implications for DOM characteristics. Monitoring flooding history and its impact on algal production could be crucial for estimating carbon balance in northern wetlands.
Globally important carbon (C) stores in boreal peatlands are vulnerable to altered hydrology through changes in precipitation and runoff patterns, groundwater inputs, and a changing cryosphere. These changes can affect the extent of boreal wetlands and their ability to sequester and transform C and other nutrients. Variation in precipitation patterns has also been increasing, with greater occurrences of both flooding and drought periods. Recent work has pointed to the increasing role of algal production in regulating C cycling during flooded periods in fen peatlands, but exactly how this affects the C sink-strength of these ecosystems is poorly understood. We evaluated temporal trends in algal biomass, ecosystem C uptake and respiration (using static and floating chamber techniques), and spectroscopic indicators of DOM quality (absorbance and fluorescence) in a boreal rich-fen peatland in which water table position had been experimentally manipulated for 13 years. Superimposed on the water table treatments were natural variations in hydrology, including periods of flooding, which allowed us to examine the legacy effects of flooding on C cycling dynamics. We had a particular focus on understanding the role of algae in regulating C cycling, as the relative contribution of algal production was observed to significantly increase with flooding. Ecosystem measures of gross primary production (GPP) increased with algal biomass, with higher algal biomass and GPP measured in the lowered water table treatment two years after persistent flooding. Prior to flooding the lowered treatment was the weakest C sink (as CO2), but this treatment became the strongest sink after flooding. The lower degree of humification (lower humification index, HIX) and yet lower bioavailability (higher spectral slope ratio, Sr) of DOM observed in the raised treatment prior to flooding persisted after two years of flooding. An index of free or bound proteins (tyrosine index, TI) increased with algal biomass across all plots during flooding, and was lowest in the raised treatment. As such, antecedent drainage conditions determined the sink-strength of this rich fen-which was also reflected in DOM characteristics. These findings indicate that monitoring flooding history and its effects on algal production could become important to estimates of C balance in northern wetlands.

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