Mires and Peat (Apr 2016)

Loss of the soil carbon storage function of drained forested peatlands

  • C. Wüst-Galley,
  • E. Mössinger,
  • J. Leifeld

DOI
https://doi.org/10.19189/MaP.2015.OMB.189
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 07
pp. 1 – 22

Abstract

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Peatlands form a large but unstable C store. Drainage of peatlands converts them into C sources, which is undesirable if increases in atmospheric CO2 levels are to be minimised. Therefore, quantification of C stocks and an understanding of which ecosystems or management regimes are capturing or emitting C is needed. Such information is scarce for temperate European forests. We studied the soil properties of sixteen peatlands in Switzerland, representing three forest types, to test whether peatlands that are more strongly affected by drainage (according to vegetation) have lost their function as C sinks or stores. Bulk density and ash enrichment, as well as H/C, O/C and C/N quotients, indicated that the soils of the two forest types that appeared to be more strongly affected by drainage were more degraded and had lost their functions as C stores. Long-term net rates of C loss estimated using the ash residue method were similar across all three forest types, for sites where this could be estimated.

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