4.8 Article

Limited contribution of permafrost carbon to methane release from thawing peatlands

Journal

NATURE CLIMATE CHANGE
Volume 7, Issue 7, Pages 507-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/NCLIMATE3328

Keywords

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Funding

  1. UK Natural Environment Research Council (NERC)
  2. Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC) [NE/K000179/1, NE/K00025X/1, NE/K000241/1, NE/K000292/1]
  3. University of Sheffield Righ Foundation Studentship
  4. NERC [NE/K000241/1, NE/K000179/1, nceo020005, NE/K00025X/1, NRCF010001, NE/K000292/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  5. Natural Environment Research Council [NE/K000241/1, NE/K000179/1, NE/K00025X/1, nceo020005, NE/K000292/1, NRCF010001] Funding Source: researchfish

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Models predict that thaw of permafrost soils at northern high latitudes will release tens of billions of tonnes of carbon (C) to the atmosphere by 2100 (refs 1-3). The effect on the Earth's climate depends strongly on the proportion of this C that is released as the more powerful greenhouse gas methane (CH4), rather than carbon dioxide (CO2) (refs 1,4); even if CH4 emissions represent just 2% of the C release, they would contribute approximately one-quarter of the climate forcing(5). In northern peatlands, thaw of ice-rich permafrost causes surface subsidence (thermokarst) and water-logging(6), exposing substantial stores (tens of kilograms of C per square meter, ref. 7) of previously frozen organic matter to anaerobic conditions, and generating ideal conditions for permafrost-derived CH4 release. Here we show that, contrary to expectations, although substantial CH4 fluxes (>20 g CH4 m(-2) yr(-1)) were recorded from thawing peatlands in northern Canada, only a small amount was derived from previously frozen C (<2 g CH4 m(-2) yr(-1)). Instead, fluxes were driven by anaerobic decomposition of recentCinputs. We conclude that thaw-induced changes in surface wetness and wetland area, rather than the anaerobic decomposition of previously frozen C, may determine the effect of permafrost thaw on CH4 emissions from northern peatlands.

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