4.8 Article

The impact of Indonesian peatland degradation on downstream marine ecosystems and the global carbon cycle

Journal

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
Volume 22, Issue 1, Pages 325-337

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.13108

Keywords

biogeochemical modeling; carbon cycle; carbon emissions; Indonesia; tropical peat

Funding

  1. German Ministry of Research and Education (BMBF) [03F0642A]

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Tropical peatlands are among the most space-efficient stores of carbon on Earth containing approximately 89Gt C. Of this, 57Gt (65%) are stored in Indonesian peatlands. Large-scale exploitation of land, including deforestation and drainage for the establishment of oil palm plantations, is changing the carbon balance of Indonesian peatlands, turning them from a natural sink to a source via outgassing of CO2 to the atmosphere and leakage of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) into the coastal ocean. The impacts of this perturbation to the coastal environment and at the global scale are largely unknown. Here, we evaluate the downstream effects of released Indonesian peat carbon on coastal ecosystems and on the global carbon cycle. We use a biogeochemical box model in combination with novel and literature observations to investigate the impact of different carbon emission scenarios on the combined ocean-atmosphere system. The release of all carbon stored in the Indonesian peat pool, considered as a worst-case scenario, will increase atmospheric pCO(2) by 8ppm to 15ppm within the next 200years. The expected impact on the Java Sea ecosystems is most significant on the short term (over a few hundred years) and is characterized by an increase of 3.3% in phytoplankton, 32% in seagrass biomass, and 5% decrease in coral biomass. On the long term, however, the coastal ecosystems will recover to reach near pre-excursion conditions. Our results suggest that the ultimate fate of the peat carbon is in the deep ocean with 69% of it landing in the deep DIC pool after 1000years, but the effects on the global ocean carbonate chemistry will be marginal.

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