The Multiscale Monitoring of Peatland Ecosystem Carbon Cycling in the Middle Taiga Zone of Western Siberia : The Mukhrino Bog Case Study

The peatlands of the West Siberian Lowlands, comprising the largest pristine peatland area of the world, have not previously been covered by continuous measurement and monitoring programs. The response of peatlands to climate change occurs over several decades. This paper summarizes the results of p...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Dyukarev, Egor, Zarov, Evgeny, Alekseychik, Pavel, Nijp, Jelmer, Filippova, Nina, Mammarella, Ivan, Filippov, Ilya, Bleuten, Wladimir, Khoroshavin, Vitaly, Ganasevich, Galina, Meshcheryakova, Anastasiya, Vesala, Timo, Lapshina, Elena
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10138/332912
id ftunivhelsihelda:oai:helda.helsinki.fi:10138/332912
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivhelsihelda:oai:helda.helsinki.fi:10138/332912 2023-05-15T18:30:40+02:00 The Multiscale Monitoring of Peatland Ecosystem Carbon Cycling in the Middle Taiga Zone of Western Siberia : The Mukhrino Bog Case Study Dyukarev, Egor Zarov, Evgeny Alekseychik, Pavel Nijp, Jelmer Filippova, Nina Mammarella, Ivan Filippov, Ilya Bleuten, Wladimir Khoroshavin, Vitaly Ganasevich, Galina Meshcheryakova, Anastasiya Vesala, Timo Lapshina, Elena 2021-08-06 http://hdl.handle.net/10138/332912 eng eng Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute Dyukarev, E.; Zarov, E.; Alekseychik, P.; Nijp, J.; Filippova, N.; Mammarella, I.; Filippov, I.; Bleuten, W.; Khoroshavin, V.; Ganasevich, G.; Meshcheryakova, A.; Vesala, T.; Lapshina, E. The Multiscale Monitoring of Peatland Ecosystem Carbon Cycling in the Middle Taiga Zone of Western Siberia: The Mukhrino Bog Case Study. Land 2021, 10, 824. http://hdl.handle.net/10138/332912 http://purl.org/eprint/entityType/JournalArticle http://purl.org/eprint/entityType/Expression 2021 ftunivhelsihelda 2022-11-02T23:58:23Z The peatlands of the West Siberian Lowlands, comprising the largest pristine peatland area of the world, have not previously been covered by continuous measurement and monitoring programs. The response of peatlands to climate change occurs over several decades. This paper summarizes the results of peatland carbon balance studies collected over ten years at the Mukhrino field station (Mukhrino FS, MFS) operating in the Middle Taiga Zone of Western Siberia. A multiscale approach was applied for the investigations of peatland carbon cycling. Carbon dioxide fluxes at the local scale studied using the chamber method showed net accumulation with rates from 110, to 57.8 gC m −2 at the Sphagnum hollow site. Net CO 2 fluxes at the pine-dwarf shrubs- Sphagnum ridge varied from negative (−32.1 gC m −2 in 2019) to positive (13.4 gC m −2 in 2017). The cumulative May-August net ecosystem exchange (NEE) from eddy-covariance (EC) measurements at the ecosystem scale was −202 gC m −2 in 2015, due to the impact of photosynthesis of pine trees which was not registered by the chamber method. The net annual accumulation of carbon in the live part of mosses was estimated at 24–190 gC m −2 depending on the Sphagnum moss species. Long-term carbon accumulation rates obtained by radiocarbon analysis ranged from 28.5 to 57.2 gC m −2 yr −1 , with local extremes of up to 176.2 gC m −2 yr −1 . The obtained estimates of various carbon fluxes using EC and chamber methods, the accounting for Sphagnum growth and decomposition, and long-term peat accumulation provided information about the functioning of the peatland ecosystems at different spatial and temporal scales. Multiscale carbon flux monitoring reveals useful new information for forecasting the response of northern peatland carbon cycles to climatic changes. Other/Unknown Material taiga Siberia Helsingfors Universitet: HELDA – Helsingin yliopiston digitaalinen arkisto
institution Open Polar
collection Helsingfors Universitet: HELDA – Helsingin yliopiston digitaalinen arkisto
op_collection_id ftunivhelsihelda
language English
description The peatlands of the West Siberian Lowlands, comprising the largest pristine peatland area of the world, have not previously been covered by continuous measurement and monitoring programs. The response of peatlands to climate change occurs over several decades. This paper summarizes the results of peatland carbon balance studies collected over ten years at the Mukhrino field station (Mukhrino FS, MFS) operating in the Middle Taiga Zone of Western Siberia. A multiscale approach was applied for the investigations of peatland carbon cycling. Carbon dioxide fluxes at the local scale studied using the chamber method showed net accumulation with rates from 110, to 57.8 gC m −2 at the Sphagnum hollow site. Net CO 2 fluxes at the pine-dwarf shrubs- Sphagnum ridge varied from negative (−32.1 gC m −2 in 2019) to positive (13.4 gC m −2 in 2017). The cumulative May-August net ecosystem exchange (NEE) from eddy-covariance (EC) measurements at the ecosystem scale was −202 gC m −2 in 2015, due to the impact of photosynthesis of pine trees which was not registered by the chamber method. The net annual accumulation of carbon in the live part of mosses was estimated at 24–190 gC m −2 depending on the Sphagnum moss species. Long-term carbon accumulation rates obtained by radiocarbon analysis ranged from 28.5 to 57.2 gC m −2 yr −1 , with local extremes of up to 176.2 gC m −2 yr −1 . The obtained estimates of various carbon fluxes using EC and chamber methods, the accounting for Sphagnum growth and decomposition, and long-term peat accumulation provided information about the functioning of the peatland ecosystems at different spatial and temporal scales. Multiscale carbon flux monitoring reveals useful new information for forecasting the response of northern peatland carbon cycles to climatic changes.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Dyukarev, Egor
Zarov, Evgeny
Alekseychik, Pavel
Nijp, Jelmer
Filippova, Nina
Mammarella, Ivan
Filippov, Ilya
Bleuten, Wladimir
Khoroshavin, Vitaly
Ganasevich, Galina
Meshcheryakova, Anastasiya
Vesala, Timo
Lapshina, Elena
spellingShingle Dyukarev, Egor
Zarov, Evgeny
Alekseychik, Pavel
Nijp, Jelmer
Filippova, Nina
Mammarella, Ivan
Filippov, Ilya
Bleuten, Wladimir
Khoroshavin, Vitaly
Ganasevich, Galina
Meshcheryakova, Anastasiya
Vesala, Timo
Lapshina, Elena
The Multiscale Monitoring of Peatland Ecosystem Carbon Cycling in the Middle Taiga Zone of Western Siberia : The Mukhrino Bog Case Study
author_facet Dyukarev, Egor
Zarov, Evgeny
Alekseychik, Pavel
Nijp, Jelmer
Filippova, Nina
Mammarella, Ivan
Filippov, Ilya
Bleuten, Wladimir
Khoroshavin, Vitaly
Ganasevich, Galina
Meshcheryakova, Anastasiya
Vesala, Timo
Lapshina, Elena
author_sort Dyukarev, Egor
title The Multiscale Monitoring of Peatland Ecosystem Carbon Cycling in the Middle Taiga Zone of Western Siberia : The Mukhrino Bog Case Study
title_short The Multiscale Monitoring of Peatland Ecosystem Carbon Cycling in the Middle Taiga Zone of Western Siberia : The Mukhrino Bog Case Study
title_full The Multiscale Monitoring of Peatland Ecosystem Carbon Cycling in the Middle Taiga Zone of Western Siberia : The Mukhrino Bog Case Study
title_fullStr The Multiscale Monitoring of Peatland Ecosystem Carbon Cycling in the Middle Taiga Zone of Western Siberia : The Mukhrino Bog Case Study
title_full_unstemmed The Multiscale Monitoring of Peatland Ecosystem Carbon Cycling in the Middle Taiga Zone of Western Siberia : The Mukhrino Bog Case Study
title_sort multiscale monitoring of peatland ecosystem carbon cycling in the middle taiga zone of western siberia : the mukhrino bog case study
publisher Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
publishDate 2021
url http://hdl.handle.net/10138/332912
genre taiga
Siberia
genre_facet taiga
Siberia
op_relation Dyukarev, E.; Zarov, E.; Alekseychik, P.; Nijp, J.; Filippova, N.; Mammarella, I.; Filippov, I.; Bleuten, W.; Khoroshavin, V.; Ganasevich, G.; Meshcheryakova, A.; Vesala, T.; Lapshina, E. The Multiscale Monitoring of Peatland Ecosystem Carbon Cycling in the Middle Taiga Zone of Western Siberia: The Mukhrino Bog Case Study. Land 2021, 10, 824.
http://hdl.handle.net/10138/332912
_version_ 1766214231109140480