Nilsson, Mats
- Department of Forest Ecology and Management, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
Research article2012Peer reviewedOpen access
Wu, Jianghua; Roulet, Nigel T.; Nilsson, Mats; Lafleur, Peter; Humphreys, Elyn
CLASS3W-MWM captured the magnitude and direction of the present day C cycling very well for both bogs and fens. Moreover, the seasonal and interannual variability were reproduced reasonably well. Root mean square errors (RMSE) were <0.65 and the degree of agreements (d*) were >0.8 for the components of net ecosystem production (NEP) for both the Mer Bleue bog and the Degero Stormyr fen. The performance of the coupled model for both bog and fen is similar to that of the stand-alone MWM driven by observed weather rather than simulated surface and soil climate. This modelling study suggests that northern peatlands are hydrologically and thermally conservative ecosystems. It was also shown that C cycling for bogs and fens was more sensitive to changes in air temperature than precipitation. Changes in temperature within the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) projected range switch the peatlands from a present-day C sink to a source, but projected changes in precipitation still maintain the peatlands as a C sink, although to a somewhat lesser degree. Increase in atmospheric CO2 concentration enhances C sequestration for both bogs and fens. Our sensitivity analysis suggests that northern peatlands respond to changes in temperature, precipitation and doubled CO2 concentration in a highly non-linear way. The sensitivity of C cycling in northern peatlands with respect to changes in air temperature, precipitation and the concentration of atmospheric CO2 together is not a simple addition or subtraction of the sensitivity of the individual changes. Therefore, the sensitivity of a combination of changes in temperature, precipitation and doubled CO2 concentration is very different from the sensitivity of peatlands to each environmental variable on their own. Our sensitivity analysis suggests that fens have a narrower tolerance to climate changes than bogs.
wetlands; northern peatlands; bogs; fens; C cycling; McGill Wetland Model (MWM); Canadian Land Surface Scheme (CLASS); CLASS3W-MWM; climate change
Atmosphere-Ocean
2012, Volume: 50, number: 4, pages: 487-506
Publisher: CMOS-SCMO
SDG15 Life on land
Forest Science
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/07055900.2012.730980
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/41044