Duke University scientists have discovered a
previously1 unknown
dual2 mechanism3 that slows peat decay and may help reduce carbon dioxide
emissions4 from peatlands during times of drought. "This discovery could hold the key to
helping5 us find a way to significantly reduce the risk that increased drought and global warming will change Earth's peatlands from carbon sinks into carbon sources, as many scientists have feared," said Curtis J. Richardson, director of the Duke University Wetland Center and professor of resource ecology at Duke's Nicholas School of the Environment.
The naturally occurring mechanism was discovered in 5,000-year-old pocosin
bogs7 in
coastal8 North Carolina. Preliminary field experiments suggest it may occur in, or be exportable to, peatlands in other regions as well.
"When we took peat extracts from the southern peatlands and put them into Canadian peatlands, they slowed down
decomposition9 there, too," said Richardson.
Peatlands are wetlands that cover only 3 percent of Earth's land but store one-third of the planet's total soil carbon. Left undisturbed, stored carbon can remain locked in their organic soil for
millennia10 due to natural antimicrobial compounds called phenolics that prevent the waterlogged peat from decaying.
If the peat dries out, however, many scientists have theorized peatlands would switch from storing carbon to pumping it out instead.
"The accepted scientific
paradigm11 is that prolonged drought, coupled with global warming and increased drainage of peatlands for agriculture and
forestry12, will lower water levels. This could cause peatlands to dry out, decay and release massive amounts of carbon back into the atmosphere," Richardson said. "Our research supports a less
dire6 scenario13. It finds that moderate long-term drought might have less impact on the release of carbon dioxide from peatlands than expected."
The reason, he said, lies buried in the peatland soil itself.