Modeling peat accumulation over decades to centuries: examples from Sweden and Canada, and perspectives for tropical peatlands

Anticipated rates of climate change and increased land-use pressure will subject peatlands to disturbances or destabilization processes not previously experienced in the Holocene. Although many studies have looked at the dynamic response of peatland ecosystem carbon or vegetation to short-term varia...

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Main Authors: Talbot, Julie, Kurnianto, Sofyan, Peichl, Matthias, Frolking, Steve, Nilsson, Mats
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: University of New Hampshire Scholars' Repository 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholars.unh.edu/earthsci_facpub/510
http://www.peatsociety.org/document/modeling-peat-accumulation-over-decades-centuries-examples-sweden-and-canada-and
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spelling ftuninhampshire:oai:scholars.unh.edu:earthsci_facpub-1509 2023-05-15T17:57:55+02:00 Modeling peat accumulation over decades to centuries: examples from Sweden and Canada, and perspectives for tropical peatlands Talbot, Julie Kurnianto, Sofyan Peichl, Matthias Frolking, Steve Nilsson, Mats 2012-06-01T07:00:00Z https://scholars.unh.edu/earthsci_facpub/510 http://www.peatsociety.org/document/modeling-peat-accumulation-over-decades-centuries-examples-sweden-and-canada-and unknown University of New Hampshire Scholars' Repository https://scholars.unh.edu/earthsci_facpub/510 http://www.peatsociety.org/document/modeling-peat-accumulation-over-decades-centuries-examples-sweden-and-canada-and Earth Sciences Scholarship peat accumulation tropical peatlands text 2012 ftuninhampshire 2023-01-30T21:35:20Z Anticipated rates of climate change and increased land-use pressure will subject peatlands to disturbances or destabilization processes not previously experienced in the Holocene. Although many studies have looked at the dynamic response of peatland ecosystem carbon or vegetation to short-term variability in climate or weather conditions, it is still difficult to predict the long-term (decadal to millennial) functional stability of peatlands, especially when multiple disturbances interact (i.e. temperature increase, droughts/floods, fire, permafrost thaw, drainage). The Holocene Peat Model (HPM) is a one-dimensional peat accumulation model explicitly simulating the interaction between hydrology, vegetation production, and decomposition. We model peat accumulation for two northernpeatlands (Mer Bleue bog, Canada; Degerö Stormyr poor fen, Sweden), and we adapt HPM to simulate peat accumulation for an Indonesian peat swamp forest, focusing on peat accumulation patterns over the past 500 years and the next few centuries. Simulated peat mass generally follows the main trends in reconstructed peat accumulation, although simulations are potentially limited by the quality of regional climate reconstructions. Different scenarios of disturbance or climate perturbation/change applied to the three sites indicate that peatlands have the resiliency to recover from a wide range of disturbances or perturbations within a few years to a few decades, but that cumulative impacts have the potential to destabilize peatlands enough to hamper their long-term carbon accumulation function. Text permafrost University of New Hampshire: Scholars Repository Canada Bleue ENVELOPE(141.406,141.406,-66.819,-66.819)
institution Open Polar
collection University of New Hampshire: Scholars Repository
op_collection_id ftuninhampshire
language unknown
topic peat
accumulation
tropical peatlands
spellingShingle peat
accumulation
tropical peatlands
Talbot, Julie
Kurnianto, Sofyan
Peichl, Matthias
Frolking, Steve
Nilsson, Mats
Modeling peat accumulation over decades to centuries: examples from Sweden and Canada, and perspectives for tropical peatlands
topic_facet peat
accumulation
tropical peatlands
description Anticipated rates of climate change and increased land-use pressure will subject peatlands to disturbances or destabilization processes not previously experienced in the Holocene. Although many studies have looked at the dynamic response of peatland ecosystem carbon or vegetation to short-term variability in climate or weather conditions, it is still difficult to predict the long-term (decadal to millennial) functional stability of peatlands, especially when multiple disturbances interact (i.e. temperature increase, droughts/floods, fire, permafrost thaw, drainage). The Holocene Peat Model (HPM) is a one-dimensional peat accumulation model explicitly simulating the interaction between hydrology, vegetation production, and decomposition. We model peat accumulation for two northernpeatlands (Mer Bleue bog, Canada; Degerö Stormyr poor fen, Sweden), and we adapt HPM to simulate peat accumulation for an Indonesian peat swamp forest, focusing on peat accumulation patterns over the past 500 years and the next few centuries. Simulated peat mass generally follows the main trends in reconstructed peat accumulation, although simulations are potentially limited by the quality of regional climate reconstructions. Different scenarios of disturbance or climate perturbation/change applied to the three sites indicate that peatlands have the resiliency to recover from a wide range of disturbances or perturbations within a few years to a few decades, but that cumulative impacts have the potential to destabilize peatlands enough to hamper their long-term carbon accumulation function.
format Text
author Talbot, Julie
Kurnianto, Sofyan
Peichl, Matthias
Frolking, Steve
Nilsson, Mats
author_facet Talbot, Julie
Kurnianto, Sofyan
Peichl, Matthias
Frolking, Steve
Nilsson, Mats
author_sort Talbot, Julie
title Modeling peat accumulation over decades to centuries: examples from Sweden and Canada, and perspectives for tropical peatlands
title_short Modeling peat accumulation over decades to centuries: examples from Sweden and Canada, and perspectives for tropical peatlands
title_full Modeling peat accumulation over decades to centuries: examples from Sweden and Canada, and perspectives for tropical peatlands
title_fullStr Modeling peat accumulation over decades to centuries: examples from Sweden and Canada, and perspectives for tropical peatlands
title_full_unstemmed Modeling peat accumulation over decades to centuries: examples from Sweden and Canada, and perspectives for tropical peatlands
title_sort modeling peat accumulation over decades to centuries: examples from sweden and canada, and perspectives for tropical peatlands
publisher University of New Hampshire Scholars' Repository
publishDate 2012
url https://scholars.unh.edu/earthsci_facpub/510
http://www.peatsociety.org/document/modeling-peat-accumulation-over-decades-centuries-examples-sweden-and-canada-and
long_lat ENVELOPE(141.406,141.406,-66.819,-66.819)
geographic Canada
Bleue
geographic_facet Canada
Bleue
genre permafrost
genre_facet permafrost
op_source Earth Sciences Scholarship
op_relation https://scholars.unh.edu/earthsci_facpub/510
http://www.peatsociety.org/document/modeling-peat-accumulation-over-decades-centuries-examples-sweden-and-canada-and
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