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Ancient wetlands provide new insight into global carbon cycle
admin
2019-02-25
发布年2019
语种英语
国家美国
领域地球科学
正文(英文)
Researchers in front of a Yedoma outcrop with multiple buried peat profiles that have been preserved in permafrost, Eastern Lena River Delta, Siberia, Russia. The buried peat profiles protrude from the cliff face. Credit: Guido Grosse (AWI)

Scientists have unearthed and pieced together evidence on more than 1,000 ancient wetland sites from across the globe that are presently covered by fields, forests and lakes. Although vanished from the Earth's surface, these buried sites could explain some of the differences between global carbon cycle models and real-life observations.

Cliffs, quarries, , and scientific sampling have revealed carbon-rich wetland deposits buried under other kinds of soils and sediments. Many are characterized by thick deposits of undecomposed (or peat), which is often preserved, resulting in a record of wetland presence. The buried wetlands frequently included coastal marshes that had been flooded by sea level rise, and wetlands that had been buried by glaciers, flooding, or wind-deposited sediments.

The researchers compiled the information about these buried wetland deposits, including where they were found, when they formed, and why they were buried.

"We were really surprised when we started to combine our data from different sites around the world. What we thought would be only a few sites turned out to be just the tip of the iceberg. When we started to look for more examples from previous studies, we identified more than 1,000 buried wetland sites across the globe," Dr. Claire Treat from the University of Eastern Finland says.

The study was led by Dr. Treat at the University of Eastern Finland and by Dr. Thomas Kleinen at the Max Planck Institute for Meteorology in Germany.

Buried wetland sites were found from high Arctic islands of Canada and Siberia to tropical Africa and Indonesia, to Southern South America and New Zealand. Some formed less than 1,000 years ago, while others formed during the warm climate period between the two latest glaciations more than 100,000 years ago.

Using these records of wetland presence since the beginning of the last interglacial, 130,000 years ago, the researchers found that wetlands in northern latitudes responded to changes in climate. Wetlands formed when the climate was warmer, and many wetlands were buried during periods of glacial advance and cooling temperatures. When it was cold, few new wetlands formed until the climate warmed again. Some of these buried peat sediments remain until today. These new findings of widespread buried peats suggest that, on the whole, peat burial can result in the slow transfer of carbon from the atmosphere to land, ultimately offsetting a small part of climate warming in the past.

"The fact that these peats are buried and stay on land is basically like a leak in what we usually consider a closed system of how carbon moves around the earth, from the atmosphere to the land and oceans. This new finding isn't represented in our models of the , and may help to explain some behaviour that differs between models and observations," Dr. Treat from the University of Eastern Finland says.

The results also suggest that present-day wetlands may continue to offset rising atmospheric CO2 concentrations as the warms if they remain undisturbed by drainage and wildfires.

Explore further: One-fifth of carbon entering coastal waters of eastern North America is buried

More information: Claire C. Treat el al., "Widespread global peatland establishment and persistence over the last 130,000 y," PNAS (2019). www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/10.1073/pnas.1813305116

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来源平台Science X network
文献类型新闻
条目标识符http://119.78.100.173/C666/handle/2XK7JSWQ/110217
专题地球科学
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admin. Ancient wetlands provide new insight into global carbon cycle. 2019.
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