Climate and peatlands

Authors
  • R. de Jong
  • M. Blaauw
  • F.M. Chambers
  • T.R. Christensen
  • F. De Vleeschouwer
  • W. Finsinger
  • S. Fronzek
  • M. Johansson
  • U. Kokfelt
  • M. Lamentowicz
  • G. Le Roux
  • D. Mauquoy
  • E.A.D. Mitchell
  • J.E. Nichols
  • E. Samaritani
  • B. van Geel
Publication date 2010
Host editors
  • J. Dodson
Book title Changing climates, earth systems and society
ISBN
  • 9789048187157
Series International year of planet earth
Pages (from-to) 85-121
Number of pages 244
Publisher Dordrecht: Springer
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics (IBED)
Abstract
Peatlands are an important natural archive for past climatic changes, primarily due to their sensitivity to changes in the water balance and the dating possibilities of peat sediments. In addition, peatlands are an important sink as well as potential source of greenhouse gases. The first part of this chapter discusses a range of well-established and novel proxies studied in peat cores (peat humification, macrofossils, testate amoebae, stomatal records from subfossil leaves, organic biomarkers and stable isotope ratios, aeolian sediment influx and geochemistry) that are used for climatic and environmental reconstructions, as well as recent developments in the dating of these sediments. The second part focuses on the role that peatland ecosystems may play as a source or sink of greenhouse gases. Emphasis is placed on the past and future development of peatlands in the discontinuous permafrost areas of northern Scandinavia, and the role of regenerating mined peatlands in north-western Europe as a carbon sink or source.
Document type Chapter
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1007/978-90-481-8716-4_5
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