Subarctic peatlands in a changing climate : greenhouse gas response to experimentally increased snow cover

The rate of change of our climate has been amplified since the industrial revolution and is expected to change even further by the end of this century. Global temperature and precipitation are expected to increase considerably over the next century. These increases are expected to be magnified in th...

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Main Author: Njuabe , Herbert Mbufong
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: Lunds universitet/Institutionen för naturgeografi och ekosystemvetenskap 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://lup.lub.lu.se/student-papers/record/1971208
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spelling ftulundlupsp:oai:lup-student-papers.lub.lu.se:1971208 2023-07-30T03:55:22+02:00 Subarctic peatlands in a changing climate : greenhouse gas response to experimentally increased snow cover Njuabe , Herbert Mbufong 2011 application/pdf http://lup.lub.lu.se/student-papers/record/1971208 eng eng Lunds universitet/Institutionen för naturgeografi och ekosystemvetenskap http://lup.lub.lu.se/student-papers/record/1971208 greenhouse gases subarctic peatlands geography physical geography climate change Earth and Environmental Sciences H2 2011 ftulundlupsp 2023-07-11T20:07:42Z The rate of change of our climate has been amplified since the industrial revolution and is expected to change even further by the end of this century. Global temperature and precipitation are expected to increase considerably over the next century. These increases are expected to be magnified in the Arctic regions. In a high latitude peatland like Storflaket, near Abisko (Northern Sweden), at the fringe of the 0°C isotherm, the environment is quite sensitive to changes in climate. Precipitation here is mainly in the form of snow. Increases in snow cover will most likely affect permafrost and active layer thickness (the layer on top of permafrost that thaws and refreezes annually), since snow insulates the ground from the low winter temperatures, resulting in relatively warm ground temperatures. With the vast stocks of carbon stored as peat in frozen mires, the thawing of this landscape will possibly make it available for decomposition and subsequent emissions as Greenhouse gases. A snow manipulation experiment that simulates future scenarios of increased winter precipitation initiated in 2005 was further investigated to understand the impacts of increased snow cover on the active layer thickness and the implications of this on carbon dioxide and methane emissions. A 1m high snow fence has been installed on Storflaket perpendicular to the prevailing wind direction every winter since 2005. The snow fences result in about doubled the snow depth on treatment plots compared to control plots. Active layer thickness has increased significantly on treatment plots after the doubling of snow cover, which has in turn increased the emission of CO2 from treated plots through ecosystem respiration. Also, there has been more carbon uptake on the treatment plots than on the control plots. Thus, the cycling of carbon has simply been enhanced. Significant differences were recorded between control and treatment plots in terms of the CO2 exchange, soil moisture content and the reflected PAR. Surprisingly, CH4 emission was almost ... Other/Unknown Material Abisko Active layer thickness Arctic Climate change Northern Sweden permafrost Subarctic Lund University Publications Student Papers (LUP-SP) Arctic Abisko ENVELOPE(18.829,18.829,68.349,68.349)
institution Open Polar
collection Lund University Publications Student Papers (LUP-SP)
op_collection_id ftulundlupsp
language English
topic greenhouse gases
subarctic peatlands
geography
physical geography
climate change
Earth and Environmental Sciences
spellingShingle greenhouse gases
subarctic peatlands
geography
physical geography
climate change
Earth and Environmental Sciences
Njuabe , Herbert Mbufong
Subarctic peatlands in a changing climate : greenhouse gas response to experimentally increased snow cover
topic_facet greenhouse gases
subarctic peatlands
geography
physical geography
climate change
Earth and Environmental Sciences
description The rate of change of our climate has been amplified since the industrial revolution and is expected to change even further by the end of this century. Global temperature and precipitation are expected to increase considerably over the next century. These increases are expected to be magnified in the Arctic regions. In a high latitude peatland like Storflaket, near Abisko (Northern Sweden), at the fringe of the 0°C isotherm, the environment is quite sensitive to changes in climate. Precipitation here is mainly in the form of snow. Increases in snow cover will most likely affect permafrost and active layer thickness (the layer on top of permafrost that thaws and refreezes annually), since snow insulates the ground from the low winter temperatures, resulting in relatively warm ground temperatures. With the vast stocks of carbon stored as peat in frozen mires, the thawing of this landscape will possibly make it available for decomposition and subsequent emissions as Greenhouse gases. A snow manipulation experiment that simulates future scenarios of increased winter precipitation initiated in 2005 was further investigated to understand the impacts of increased snow cover on the active layer thickness and the implications of this on carbon dioxide and methane emissions. A 1m high snow fence has been installed on Storflaket perpendicular to the prevailing wind direction every winter since 2005. The snow fences result in about doubled the snow depth on treatment plots compared to control plots. Active layer thickness has increased significantly on treatment plots after the doubling of snow cover, which has in turn increased the emission of CO2 from treated plots through ecosystem respiration. Also, there has been more carbon uptake on the treatment plots than on the control plots. Thus, the cycling of carbon has simply been enhanced. Significant differences were recorded between control and treatment plots in terms of the CO2 exchange, soil moisture content and the reflected PAR. Surprisingly, CH4 emission was almost ...
format Other/Unknown Material
author Njuabe , Herbert Mbufong
author_facet Njuabe , Herbert Mbufong
author_sort Njuabe , Herbert Mbufong
title Subarctic peatlands in a changing climate : greenhouse gas response to experimentally increased snow cover
title_short Subarctic peatlands in a changing climate : greenhouse gas response to experimentally increased snow cover
title_full Subarctic peatlands in a changing climate : greenhouse gas response to experimentally increased snow cover
title_fullStr Subarctic peatlands in a changing climate : greenhouse gas response to experimentally increased snow cover
title_full_unstemmed Subarctic peatlands in a changing climate : greenhouse gas response to experimentally increased snow cover
title_sort subarctic peatlands in a changing climate : greenhouse gas response to experimentally increased snow cover
publisher Lunds universitet/Institutionen för naturgeografi och ekosystemvetenskap
publishDate 2011
url http://lup.lub.lu.se/student-papers/record/1971208
long_lat ENVELOPE(18.829,18.829,68.349,68.349)
geographic Arctic
Abisko
geographic_facet Arctic
Abisko
genre Abisko
Active layer thickness
Arctic
Climate change
Northern Sweden
permafrost
Subarctic
genre_facet Abisko
Active layer thickness
Arctic
Climate change
Northern Sweden
permafrost
Subarctic
op_relation http://lup.lub.lu.se/student-papers/record/1971208
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