Skip to main content
SLU publication database (SLUpub)

Abstract

Forest and peatland ecosystems constitute the two major carbon pools in the boreal region. We assess the evolution in total storage and partitioning of ecosystem carbon following recent paludification of forest into peatland at two sites in Northeast European Russia. Based on radiocarbon dating of basal peat and quantification of total ecosystem carbon storage, our results show that paludification rates and its consequences for carbon storage vary significantly between sites. A peatland expanding on ground with steeper slopes has experienced a slow lateral advance in recent times, about 2.6 m on average per century, whereas a peatland in flatter terrain has expanded much more rapidly, about 35 m on average per century. The total ecosystem carbon storage (sum of phytomass, top soil organics or peat, and 30 cm of underlying mineral soil) showed a long-term trend toward increased ecosystem C storage following the replacement of forest (mean value = 20.8 kg C/m(2), range = 13.0-43.4 kg C/m(2)) by peatland (>100 kg C/m(2) in the deepest peat deposits). However, the transitional stage in which the forest is replaced by the margin of the peatland results in a short-term decrease of carbon stored in the ecosystem with a mean loss of 7.5 kg C/m(2). After the initiation of a peatland through paludification, a period of decades to centuries of peat accumulation is needed to compensate for the initial loss of carbon. In the short term, an intensification of the paludification process could lead to a loss of carbon stored in the boreal region.

Keywords

boreal forest; carbon storage; ecotone; expansion rate; late Holocene; paludification; peatland; peatland margins

Published in

Holocene
2014, volume: 24, number: 9, pages: 1126-1136

SLU Authors

UKÄ Subject classification

Geosciences, Multidisciplinary
Forest Science

Publication identifier

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/0959683614523803

Permanent link to this page (URI)

https://res.slu.se/id/publ/61899