Long-term macronutrient stoichiometry of UK ombrotrophic peatlands

In this paper we report new data on peat carbon (C), nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) concentrations and accumulation rates for 15 sites in the UK. Concentrations of C, N and P measured in peat from five ombrotrophic blanket mires, spanning 4000–10,000years to present were combined with existing nutr...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Science of the total environment 2016-12, Vol.572, p.1561-1572
Hauptverfasser: Schillereff, Daniel N., Boyle, John F., Toberman, Hannah, Adams, Jessica L., Bryant, Charlotte L., Chiverrell, Richard C., Helliwell, Rachel C., Keenan, Patrick, Lilly, Allan, Tipping, Edward
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In this paper we report new data on peat carbon (C), nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) concentrations and accumulation rates for 15 sites in the UK. Concentrations of C, N and P measured in peat from five ombrotrophic blanket mires, spanning 4000–10,000years to present were combined with existing nutrient data from ten Scottish ombrotrophic peat bogs to provide the first UK perspective on millennial scale macronutrient concentrations in ombrotrophic peats. Long-term average C, N and P concentrations (0–1.25m) for the UK are 54.8, 1.56 and 0.039wt%, of similar magnitude to the few published comparable sites worldwide. The uppermost peat (0–0.2m) is enriched in P and N (51.0, 1.86, and 0.070wt%) relative to the deeper peat (0.5–1.25m, 56.3, 1.39, and 0.027wt%). Long-term average (whole core) accumulation rates of C, N and P are 25.3±2.2gCm−2year−1 (mean±SE), 0.70±0.09gNm−2year−1 and 0.018±0.004gPm−2year−1, again similar to values reported elsewhere in the world. The two most significant findings are: 1) that a regression model of N concentration on P concentration and mean annual precipitation, based on global meta data for surface peat samples, can explain 54% of variance in N concentration in these UK peat profiles; and 2) budget calculations for the UK peat cores yield an estimate for long-term average N-fixation of 0.8gm−2year−1. Our UK results, and comparison with others sites, corroborate published estimates of N storage in northern boreal peatlands through the Holocene as ranging between 8 and 15Pg N. However, the observed correlation of N% with both mean annual precipitation and P concentration allows a potential bias in global estimates that do not take this into account. The peat sampling data set has been deposited at the NERC Data Centre (Toberman et al., 2016). [Display omitted] •C, N and P concentrations and long-term burial rates in UK peat are of similar magnitude to published values elsewhere.•The long-term burial flux in UK peat of P is broadly consistent with atmospheric deposition rates; N burial exceeds atmospheric deposition, consistent with substantial N fixation by peat bogs.•N and P concentrations in peat are strongly associated in both UK and sites elsewhere in the world, consistent with a key role for P in biological fixation of N and C.
ISSN:0048-9697
1879-1026
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2016.03.180