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Reconstructing past changes in wetland hydrology and carbon cycling

Lead Research Organisation: University of Bristol
Department Name: Earth Sciences

Abstract

Microbial processes in terrestrial settings are critical to governing greenhouse gas emissions. The modern carbon soil reservoir exceeds that of terrestrial vegetation and the atmosphere combined, and soil microorganisms annually cycle 1/3 of the carbon photosynthesised and account for the largest natural methane flux. In doing so, they govern the chemical and climatic state of our planet. And yet these processes remain poorly understood, mediated by a range of environmental factors. Insight can be derived from geological archives that document the responses of biogeochemical systems to past environmental perturbations. Our previous studies on peat and lignites provide tantalising insights into climate-driven disruption of the carbon cycle, but the underlying mechanisms remain unresolved. This project will develop new approaches and records based on the isotopic composition of peat organic matter derived from plants and bacteria. Peat and lignite deposits have long been used to explore past changes in climate, especially changes in temperature and precipitation. When it becomes warmer is organic matter preservation enhanced due to higher productivity or is that OM degraded due to enhanced microbial activity? If degraded, is that manifested as an increased flux of carbon dioxide? Or methane? Or neither because microorganisms also adapt to consume these greenhouse gases before they can escape from the wetland? We have obtained some insight by determining the carbon isotopic composition of individual compounds in the peat, some derived from plants and others derived from microorganisms, allowing us to probe the rebalancing of carbon flow during environmental disruption. This project will explore and compare environmental and biogeochemical disruptions in peatland. We will then refine the determination of bacterial hydrogen isotopic compositions to ascertain the relationships between past changes in peatland hydrology, bacterial metabolism and carbon cycling.

People

ORCID iD

Mike Vreeken (Student)

Publications

10 25 50

Studentship Projects

Project Reference Relationship Related To Start End Student Name
NE/S007504/1 30/09/2019 30/11/2028
2750470 Studentship NE/S007504/1 30/09/2022 30/03/2026 Mike Vreeken