Scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Argonne National
Laboratory have created a new model to more accurately describe the
greenhouse gases likely to be released from Arctic peatlands as they
warm. Their findings, based on modeling how oxygen filters through soil,
suggest that previous models probably underestimated methane emissions
and overrepresented carbon dioxide emissions from these regions.
Peatlands, common in the Arctic, are wetlands filled with dead and
decaying organic matter. They are the result of millions of years of
plants dying and breaking down into rich soil, so they contain a massive
amount of carbon.
“Peatlands cover about four percent of all land, but they hold 20
percent of all carbon stored on land,” said Argonne scientist Zhaosheng
Fan, who led the study.
Cold temperatures keep the carbon locked in the soil. As the ground
warms, however, microbes come to life and begin to decompose all that
organic matter, which releases carbon into the atmosphere.
Unfortunately, the extreme northern regions of the world are where
warming has accelerated the most quickly—and it’s expected to pick up in
the future. Scientists are concerned that Arctic warming could spiral
quickly into a self-reinforcing cycle that dumps an enormous amount of
carbon into the atmosphere.
Scientists create complex models to estimate how this might unfold,
combining data taken on the ground with varying emissions scenarios to
forecast climate change far into the future.
One area of particular interest is which form of carbon will be released. Microbes can create either CO2 or methane, and each gas has different effects on the atmosphere. CO2
is a long-lived greenhouse gas, staying in the atmosphere for up to a
century or more. Methane delivers a powerful punch—its impact is about
20 times greater than CO2—but filters out of the atmosphere
in about 12 years. Accurately predicting how much of each gas will be
released, therefore, is important.
Down in the ground, the conditions that microbes find themselves in
will affect what form of carbon they release. If there’s a lot of oxygen
and water available, microbes will only produce CO2. If there isn’t enough oxygen, they will produce methane and CO2.
Up until now, researchers had been using a simple model that assumed
water was the primary divider; soil above the water table would produce
microbes that made CO2, and microbes below would produce methane.
“But experiments had been showing that there could be significant
limits on oxygen availability above the water table, and this would
affect what form of carbon microbes release,” Fan said.
The size and characteristics of soil particles matter. If the oxygen
gets trapped in air bubbles and consumed by other microbes or can’t
filter down through soil, soil microbes will produce methane even if
they’re above the water table.
“So we set out to make a model that would take these findings into account,” Fan said.
The team used experimental data from peatland taken near Fairbanks,
Alaska and plugged it into their model. The results showed their new
model was much more accurate and suggested that more methane is produced
and proportionally less CO2—than predicted by older water table-based models.
“Revising this calculation will substantially affect current greenhouse gas production models in the Arctic,” Fan said.
Next, Fan said, they are looking into adding other soil
characteristics, such as nutrients like nitrogen, into the model to see
how they might affect microbe output.
By Louise Lerner for ANL Press
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