Control of carbon and nitrogen accumulation by vegetation in pristine bogs of southern Patagonia.

Sci Total Environ

Biodiversity and Ecosystem Research Group, Institute of Landscape Ecology, University of Muenster, Heisenbergstr. 2, 48149 Muenster, Germany; Institute of Landscape Ecology and Resources Management, Giessen University, Heinrich-Buff-Ring 26, 35392 Gießen, Germany.

Published: March 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • Peatlands act as long-term storage for carbon and nitrogen but are changing due to human influence, leading to shifts in vegetation from mosses to vascular plants.
  • A study in a Patagonian cushion bog showed that while carbon accumulation rates were similar in both cushion and Sphagnum bogs over the long term, nitrogen accumulation was higher in the cushion bog.
  • Despite high productivity from cushion plants, their decomposition rates may reduce their overall carbon sink capability to levels comparable with Sphagnum bogs, indicating that cushion bogs are effective nitrogen sinks but may not significantly enhance carbon storage.

Article Abstract

Peatlands are long-term sinks of carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) that are exposed to anthropogenic pressure. This has often induced a vegetation shift from peat mosses towards increasing presence of vascular plants. However, the impact of this vegetation shift on the sink function of peatlands remains unclear. To address this research gap, we studied C and N accumulation in a Patagonian cushion bog where a shift to the predominance of vascular cushion plants is a natural phenomenon since millennia. For comparison, long-term accumulation and decomposition patterns in a pristine Patagonian Sphagnum bog were studied. Thereto, we determined recent and long-term rates of C and N accumulation, their within-site variability, and studied plant-macrofossils. These results were related to decomposition indicators (C/N ratio, humification index, stable isotopes) of the bog types. Despite differences in decomposition indicators, long-term rates of C accumulation were of similar magnitude in the Sphagnum (21.9 g C m yr) and in the cushion bog (22.2 g C m yr). N accumulation was significantly lower in the Sphagnum bog (0.35 g N m yr) compared to the surprisingly high accumulation in the cushion bog (0.55 g N m yr). Tephra depositions in the cushion bog about 1600 cal. Years ago presumably triggered the vegetation shift towards dominance of cushion plants by a fertilization effect. C accumulation rates during past decades in the upper decimeters of peat were four times higher in the cushion bog (245 g C m yr) compared to the Sphagnum bog (64 g C m yr), but substantially decreased since the appearance of cushion plants. High decomposition rates as indicated by decomposition indicators thus apparently offset the higher productivity of cushion plants in the long term. While cushion bogs appear to be effective N sinks, their C sink function may therefore be equal to Sphagnum bogs.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.151293DOI Listing

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