Abstract

Abstract. Peatlands have often been neglected in Earth system models (ESMs). Where they are included, they are usually represented via a separate, prescribed grid cell fraction that is given the physical characteristics of a peat (highly organic) soil. However, in reality soils vary on a spectrum between purely mineral soil (no organic material) and purely organic soil, typically with an organic layer of variable thickness overlying mineral soil below. They are also dynamic, with organic layer thickness and its properties changing over time. Neither the spectrum of soil types nor their dynamic nature can be captured by current ESMs. Here we present a new version of an ESM land surface scheme (Joint UK Land Environment Simulator, JULES) where soil organic matter accumulation – and thus peatland formation, degradation and stability – is integrated in the vertically resolved soil carbon scheme. We also introduce the capacity to track soil carbon age as a function of depth in JULES and compare this to measured peat age–depth profiles. The new scheme is tested and evaluated at northern and temperate sites. This scheme simulates dynamic feedbacks between the soil organic material and its thermal and hydraulic characteristics. We show that draining the peatlands can lead to significant carbon loss, soil compaction and changes in peat properties. However, negative feedbacks can lead to the potential for peatlands to rewet themselves following drainage. These ecohydrological feedbacks can also lead to peatlands maintaining themselves in climates where peat formation would not otherwise initiate in the model, i.e. displaying some degree of resilience. The new model produces similar results to the original model for mineral soils and realistic profiles of soil organic carbon for peatlands. We evaluate the model against typical peat profiles based on 216 northern and temperate sites from a global dataset of peat cores. The root-mean-squared error (RMSE) in the soil carbon profile is reduced by 35 %–80 % in the best-performing JULES-Peat simulations compared with the standard JULES configuration. The RMSE in these JULES-Peat simulations is 7.7–16.7 kg C m−3 depending on climate zone, which is considerably smaller than the soil carbon itself (around 30–60 kg C m−3). The RMSE at mineral soil sites is also reduced in JULES-Peat compared with the original JULES configuration (reduced by ∼ 30 %–50 %). Thus, JULES-Peat can be used as a complete scheme that simulates both organic and mineral soils. It does not require any additional input data and introduces minimal additional variables to the model. This provides a new approach for improving the simulation of organic and peatland soils and associated carbon-cycle feedbacks in ESMs.

Highlights

  • Peatlands are extremely carbon-dense ecosystems, occupying only around 3 % of the land surface but storing up to 30 % of the vast soil carbon stock (Frolking et al, 2011)

  • Since JULES is a global model, it is important that adding the functionality to represent peat does not degrade model performance for mineral soils

  • We first evaluate the model at mineral soil sites

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Summary

Introduction

Peatlands are extremely carbon-dense ecosystems, occupying only around 3 % of the land surface but storing up to 30 % of the vast soil carbon stock (Frolking et al, 2011). Highlatitude peatlands alone store more than 400 Gt C (Hugelius et al, 2020), and tropical peatland carbon is thought to be more than 100 Gt C (Dargie et al, 2017) This carbon stock has accumulated over millennia – approximately 10 000 years since the Last Glacial Maximum – but can be released very quickly if the peatland becomes dry or otherwise loses its function (Maljanen et al, 2010; Tiemeyer et al, 2016). This has been taking place across the world’s peatlands over the last ∼ 170 years due to land use conversion for agriculture, leading to additional greenhouse gas emissions (Leifeld and Menichetti, 2018).

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