DURHAM, N.C. -- High-intensity fires can destroy peat bogs and cause them to emit huge amounts of their stored carbon into the atmosphere as greenhouse gases, but a new 91社区福利 study finds low-severity fires spark the opposite outcome.

The smaller fires help protect the stored carbon and enhance the peatlands鈥 long-term storage of it.

The flash heating of moist peat during less severe surface fires chemically alters the exterior of clumped soil particles and 鈥渆ssentially creates a crust that makes it difficult for microbes to reach the organic matter inside,鈥 said Neal Flanagan, visiting assistant professor at the Duke Wetland Center and Duke鈥檚 Nicholas School of the Environment.

This reaction -- which Flanagan calls 鈥渢he cr猫me brulee effect鈥 -- shields the fire-affected peat from decay. Over time, this protective barrier helps slow the rate at which a peatland鈥檚 stored carbon is released back into the environment as climate-warming carbon dioxide and methane, even during periods of extreme drought.

By documenting this effect on peatland soils from Minnesota to Peru, 鈥渢his study demonstrates the vital and nuanced, but still largely overlooked, role fire plays in preserving peat across a wide latitudinal gradient, from the hemi-boreal zone to the tropics,鈥 said Curtis J. Richardson, director of the Duke Wetland Center.

鈥淭his is the first time any study has been able to show that,鈥 Richardson said, 鈥渁nd it has important implications for the beneficial use of low-severity fire in managing peatlands, especially at a time of increasing wildfires and droughts.鈥

The researchers published their peer-reviewed findings May 10 in the journal Global Change Biology.

Peatlands are wetlands that cover only 3% of Earth's land but store one-third of the planet's total soil carbon. Left undisturbed, they can lock away carbon in their organic soil for millennia due to natural antimicrobial compounds called phenolics and aromatics that earlier studies by the Duke team have shown can prevent even drier peat from decaying. If a smoldering, high-intensity fire or other major disturbance destroys this natural protection, however, they can quickly turn from carbon sinks to carbon sources.

To conduct the new study, Flanagan and his colleagues at the Duke Wetland Center monitored a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service proscribed burn of a peatland pocosin, or shrub-covered wetland bog, at Pocosin Lakes National Wildlife Refuge in eastern North Carolina in 2015. Using field sensors, they measured the changing intensity of the fire over its duration and the effects it had on soil moisture, surface temperatures and plant cover. They also did chemical analyses of soil organic matter samples collected before and after the fire.

They then replicated the intensity and duration of the N.C. fire, which briefly reached temperatures of 850oF, in controlled laboratory tests on soil from peatlands in Minnesota, Florida and the Amazon basin of Peru, and analyzed the burn samples using using X鈥恟ay photoelectron spectroscopy and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy.

The analysis showed that the low-severity fires increased the 91社区福利 of carbon condensation and aromatization in the soil samples, particularly those collected from the peatlands鈥 surface. In other words, the researchers saw the 鈥渃r猫me brulee effect鈥 in samples from each of the latitudes.

Long-term laboratory incubations of the burnt samples showed lower cumulative CO2 emissions coming from the peat for more than 1-3 years after the tests.

鈥淚nitially, there was some loss of carbon, but long-term you easily offset that because there鈥檚 also reduced respiration by the microbes that promote decay, so the peat is decomposing at a much slower rate,鈥 Flanagan said.

Globally, peatlands contain approximately 560 gigatons of stored carbon. That鈥檚 the same amount that is stored in all forests and nearly as much as the 597 gigatons found in the atmosphere.

鈥淚mproving the way we manage and preserve peatlands is critical given their importance in Earth鈥檚 carbon budget and the way climate change is altering natural fire regimes worldwide,鈥 Richardson said, 鈥淭his study reminds us that fire is not just a destructive anomaly in peatlands, it can also be a beneficial part of their ecology that has a positive influence on their carbon accretion.鈥

Flanagan and Richardson conducted the study with fellow Duke Wetland Center researchers Hongjun Wang and Scott Winton. Winton also holds appointments at ETH Zurich鈥檚 Institute of Biogeochemistry and Pollutant Dynamics and the Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology.

Primary funding came from the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science鈥檚 Terrestrial Ecosystem Sciences division (grant #DE-SC0012272). Additional support came from the 91社区福利 Wetland Center Endowment and the 91社区福利 Shared Materials Instrumentation Facility.

CITATION: 鈥淟ow-Severity Fire as a Mechanism of Organic Matter Protection in Global Peatlands: Thermal Alteration Slows Decomposition,鈥 Neal E. Flanagan, Hongjun Wang, Scott Winton and Curtis J. Richardson; May 10, 2020, Global Chang Biology. DOI: 10.1111/gcb.15102

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