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Are new carbon sinks appearing in the Arctic?
by Staff Writers
Helsinki, Finland (SPX) May 10, 2022

In the bore sample, the dark colour denotes mineral soil, the brown/green organic matter, mostly moss.

In 2018, an international research group bored for soil samples in three sites around the Isfjorden fjord in Svalbard, which is part of Norway. The same phenomenon was seen each boring site: mineral soil covered by a thin layer of organic matter. In other words, this layer contains a lot of carbon extracted from the atmosphere through photosynthesis.

The research group headed by researcher Minna Valiranta from the University of Helsinki has given the name 'proto-peat' to such organic soil accumulations, which are composed mostly of moss formed in increasingly warm arctic climate conditions.

"It's not yet peat in the actual sense of the word, but you could say it's the starting point for the formation of peat," says Valiranta, who works at the Faculty of Biological and Environmental Sciences. The research group also includes Teemu Juselius and Sanna Piilo, doctoral researchers under Valiranta's supervision.

Such proto-peat deposits elicit interest also internationally. Valiranta is involved in a larger project funded by the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC), a British institution corresponding to the Academy of Finland.

This project investigates precisely the same phenomenon, that is, whether global warming has already led to the spread of peatland vegetation into the Arctic. This spread of vegetation is part of a more extensive phenomenon known as 'arctic greening', which commonly refers to increasing shrub growth in the Arctic, as vascular plants spread to regions previously barren.

"If this process that generates proto-peat occurs extensively, an unexpected carbon reservoir, or a plant community that mitigates climate change, may be in the process of establishing itself in the north. This reservoir has not been included in the modelling of ecosystems and the atmosphere, as it has traditionally been thought that no new peatlands are formed," Valiranta notes.

Climate-ecosystem models are continually evolving, and only recently have attempts been made to include the impact of peatlands in such models.

"You can say that the discovery of new carbon sinks brings into play a new component that must be considered in models to better predict the functioning of ecosystems in a warming climate," Valiranta says.

Research Report:Newly initiated carbon stock, organic soil accumulation patterns and main driving factors in the High Arctic Svalbard, Norway


Related Links
University of Helsinki
Beyond the Ice Age


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