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Moderate drop in water table increases peatland...
Journal article

Moderate drop in water table increases peatland vulnerability to post-fire regime shift

Abstract

Northern and tropical peatlands represent a globally significant carbon reserve accumulated over thousands of years of waterlogged conditions. It is unclear whether moderate drying predicted for northern peatlands will stimulate burning and carbon losses as has occurred in their smaller tropical counterparts where the carbon legacy has been destabilized due to severe drainage and deep peat fires. Capitalizing on a unique long-term experiment, we quantify the post-wildfire recovery of a northern peatland subjected to decadal drainage. We show that the moderate drop in water table position predicted for most northern regions triggers a shift in vegetation composition previously observed within only severely disturbed tropical peatlands. The combined impact of moderate drainage followed by wildfire converted the low productivity, moss-dominated peatland to a non-carbon accumulating shrub-grass ecosystem. This new ecosystem is likely to experience a low intensity, high frequency wildfire regime, which will further deplete the legacy of stored peat carbon.

Authors

Kettridge N; Turetsky MR; Sherwood JH; Thompson DK; Miller CA; Benscoter BW; Flannigan MD; Wotton BM; Waddington JM

Journal

Scientific Reports, Vol. 5, No. 1,

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

January 1, 2015

DOI

10.1038/srep08063

ISSN

2045-2322

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