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Bibliothèque Land management as a factor controlling dissolved organic carbon release from upland peat soils 1: Spatial variation in DOC productivity

Land management as a factor controlling dissolved organic carbon release from upland peat soils 1: Spatial variation in DOC productivity

Land management as a factor controlling dissolved organic carbon release from upland peat soils 1: Spatial variation in DOC productivity

Resource information

Date of publication
Décembre 2009
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
AGRIS:US201301624787
Pages
3803-3813

The importance of soil storage in global carbon cycling is well recognised and factors leading to increased losses from this pool may act as a positive feedback mechanism in global warming. Upland peat soils are usually assumed to serve as carbon sinks, there is however increasing evidence of carbon loss from upland peat soils, and DOC concentrations in UK rivers have increased markedly over the past three decades. A number of drivers for increasing DOC release from peat soils have been proposed although many of these would not explain fine-scale variations in DOC release observed in many catchments. We examined the effect of land use and management on DOC production in upland peat catchments at two spatial scales within the UK. DOC concentration was measured in streams draining 50 small scale catchments (

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Authors and Publishers

Author(s), editor(s), contributor(s)

Yallop, A.R.
Clutterbuck, B.

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