Tuesday, April 5, 2011

A. V. Reyes & C. A. Cooke, PNAS 108 (2011), Northern peatland initiation lagged abrupt increases in deglacial atmospheric CH4

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, (March 22, 2011), Vol. 108, No. 12, pp. 4748-4753; doi: 10.1073/pnas.1013270108


Northern peatland initiation lagged abrupt increases in deglacial atmospheric CH4

  1. Alberto V. Reyes1,2,3 and 
  2. Colin A. Cooke1,2,4
  1. Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada T6G 2E3
  1. Edited by James P. Kennett, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA 93106, and approved January 14, 2011 (received for review September 13, 2010)

Abstract

Peatlands are a key component of the global carbon cycle. Chronologies of peatland initiation are typically based on compiled basal peat radiocarbon (14C) dates and frequency histograms of binned calibrated age ranges. However, such compilations are problematic because poor quality 14C dates are commonly included and because frequency histograms of binned age ranges introduce chronological artefacts that bias the record of peatland initiation. Using a published compilation of 274 basal 14C dates from Alaska as a case study, we show that nearly half the 14C dates are inappropriate for reconstructing peatland initiation, and that the temporal structure of peatland initiation is sensitive to sampling biases and treatment of calibrated 14C dates. We present revised chronologies of peatland initiation for Alaska and the circumpolar Arctic based on summed probability distributions of calibrated 14C dates. These revised chronologies reveal that northern peatland initiation lagged abrupt increases in atmospheric CH4 concentration at the start of the Bølling–Allerød interstadial (Termination 1A) and the end of the Younger Dryas chronozone (Termination 1B), suggesting that northern peatlands were not the primary drivers of the rapid increases in atmospheric CH4. Our results demonstrate that subtle methodological changes in the synthesis of basal 14C ages lead to substantially different interpretations of temporal trends in peatland initiation, with direct implications for the role of peatlands in the global carbon cycle.

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