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1 o reduced C accumulation or even net loss of peat.
2 und biomass (AGB) accumulation rate of OP on peat.
3 ce processes and not degradation of catotelm peat.
4 s in response to greater aeration of surface peat.
5  carbon cycle by storing about 40-90 Gt C in peat.
6 s and accumulation of organophilic metals in peat.
7 ed 163,336 ha, including 137,044 ha (84%) on peat.
8 ption and retention of presorbed As in model peat.
9 remained in solution without (re)sorption to peat.
10 at 85% of antimonite was sorbed by untreated peat.
11 wly-decomposing organic matter, such as moss peat.
12 nitrate reduction releases arsenic from this peat.
13  were complexed with alcoholic groups of the peat.
14  well within those previously determined for peat (+0.6 +/-2.0 per thousand).
15 cilitating multi-proxy analysis of preserved peat [14].
16  0.01 angstrom) and monothioarsenate-treated peat (2.80 +/- 0.02 angstrom) compared to arsenite treat
17                Aboveground biomass stocks on peat accumulated at ~6.39 +/- 1.12 Mg ha(-1) per year in
18      BP and was followed by relatively rapid peat accumulation ( 0.1 cm/year) until 2150 cal.
19 rost originally aggraded simultaneously with peat accumulation (syngenetic permafrost) at both sites.
20  human disruption of the feedbacks that link peat accumulation and groundwater hydrology.
21 h the observed positive correlations between peat accumulation rates and photosynthetic rates over th
22 de following thaw, after which post-thaw bog peat accumulation returned sites to net C sinks.
23 unclear because of complex feedbacks between peat accumulation, hydrology and vegetation.
24 c hiatus as well as the recent resurgence of peat accumulation, sometime after 1950 AD.
25 les from hours to years can reduce long-term peat accumulation.
26 use of greater plant productivity and faster peat accumulation.
27 vity of CO2 and CH4 production and increased peat aerobicity due to enhanced growing-season evapotran
28 lower cumulative CO(2) emissions from burned peat after 1-3 years.
29 ional groups, particularly on the surface of peat aggregates.
30 dustrial 1760 to 1880 is a factor of 4.3 for peat and 3.0 for sediment.
31     Based on our results, we revise existing peat and carbon loss estimates for recurrent fires in dr
32                             Phenol uptake by peat and clay soils was also associated with a significa
33 this gap, we examined the biogeochemistry of peat and dissolved organic matter (DOM) along a approxim
34 ings were transplanted in 2L pots containing peat and perlite (1:1v/v).
35 is largely erroneous and caused by comparing peat and sediment against different reference time perio
36               Pre-industrial accumulation in peat and sediment is a factor of approximately 5 greater
37 e distribution, area and volumes of tropical peat and their continental contributions.
38 own from seeds sown in seed trays containing peat and young seedlings were transplanted in 2L pots co
39 a affected by acid mine drainage, as well as peats and acidic soils, and to better define optimal con
40  from issues of interaction (oil sorption in peat) and highly nonlinear partitioning with depletion (
41  the impact of land-cover change on tropical peat, and develop science-based peatland management prac
42 ed regions, strict requirements to avoid all peat, and routine monitoring of clearly defined forest c
43 rochemical analysis to Elliott soil, Pahokee peat, and Suwannee river humic acid (HA) samples before
44 cts, six organic composts (manure, mushroom, peat, and untreated wood), and one food and yard waste c
45 rent C accumulation rates in recently formed peat are an artefact and take steps to account for it.
46              Asia hosts 38% of both tropical peat area and volume with Indonesia as the main regional
47  the holder of the deepest and most extended peat areas in the tropics.
48                        In bog vegetation and peat, arsenic (As) concentrations and accumulation rates
49      The physico-chemical characteristics of peat, as well as the hydrology of PSFs are affected afte
50 g sulfide concentrations with purified model peat at pH 6, forming reduced organic sulfur species, an
51  the rate of recent climate change, but moss peat banks contain an unrivalled temporal record of past
52                 We have developed a sphagnum peat-based compost platform for investigating plant-micr
53              Radiocarbon dates indicate that peat began accumulating from about 10,600 years ago, coi
54  we undertook fieldwork at LAM to sample the peat bog 30 m east of the Norse ruins for a multiproxy p
55  and mercury stable isotope composition in a peat bog ecosystem.
56 ed in several planctomycetes isolated from a peat bog in Northern Russia, although the gene/enzyme re
57  the seawater reference material IAEA-443, a peat bog lake, and groundwater from an experiment of in
58 e that atmospheric mercury deposition to the peat bog surface is dominated by GEM dry deposition (79%
59 on which is 10x greater than any terrestrial peat bog, and promises to provide new insight into envir
60 during the Moche culture 200-800 AD, whereas peat-bog records from southern South America suggest ear
61 g vegetation data from 56 Sphagnum-dominated peat bogs across Europe, we show that in these ecosystem
62  composition of Pb was determined in Finnish peat bogs and their porewaters from Harjavalta (HAR, nea
63 phase speciation of As, Fe, and S in English peat bogs by X-ray absorption spectroscopy.
64  the isotopic composition of Pb in all three peat bogs is remarkably similar.
65 axy deposits regularly discovered within the peat bogs of Ireland and Scotland.
66                                The extensive peat bogs of Southern Scandinavia have yielded rich Meso
67 as collected from 21 ombrotrophic (rain-fed) peat bogs surrounding open pit mines and upgrading facil
68 urnover are decoupled, which may allow these peat bogs to maintain ecosystem functioning when subject
69 s was collected from ombrotrophic (rain-fed) peat bogs to quantify dust emissions from the open-pit m
70 indicate that geologic detectors (craters in peat bogs) and space-based detectors (satellites measuri
71               This strongly suggests that in peat bogs, species turnover across environmental gradien
72 e structure spectra revealed Sb in untreated peat bound to carboxyl or phenol groups with average Sb-
73 e present (5 kyBP), the concurrent C sink by peat buildup could mask large early LUC emissions.
74 associated with lowering the water table and peat burning, releasing large amounts of carbon stored i
75 d in remaining samples (n=15) collected from peat burning, shredded tire combustion, and cook-stove e
76 stem responses are largely driven by surface peat, but that the vast C bank at depth in peatlands is
77  in the AB mosses, V exceeds that of ancient peat by a factor of 6; it is therefore enriched in the m
78 ing rate on the decomposition of subtropical peats, by applying either a large single-step (10 degree
79 agonia to calculate their long- versus short-peat C accumulation rates.
80 e found that upon thaw, C loss of the forest peat C is equivalent to 30% of the initial forest C stoc
81 e found that upon thaw, C loss of the forest peat C is equivalent to ~30% of the initial forest C sto
82 acrotelm rates were compared to the catotelm peat C legacies using an empirical modeling approach tha
83          Here, we combine updated continuous peat C reconstructions with the land C balance inferred
84 a critical pathway for the remobilization of peat C stocks as well as a major component of the net ec
85                                              Peat C/N ratios decreased whereas humification rates inc
86 n that accumulation rates in recently formed peat can be compared to those from older, deeper, peat i
87 in fact the reverse can be true because deep peat can be modified by events hundreds of years after i
88 creased C accumulation rates in near-surface peat cannot be used to infer that a peatland as a whole
89 l peatlands hold about 15%-19% of the global peat carbon (C) pool of which 77% is stored in the peat
90 Siberia and Alaska increases the circumpolar peat carbon pool estimate for permafrost regions by over
91 d 0.59 Mg C ha(-1) yr(-1), and the resulting peat carbon stocks at the end of the 11,000-year and 500
92 ch will further deplete the legacy of stored peat carbon.
93 atter released to surface waters in a boreal peat catchment using radiocarbon dating of particulate a
94  C accumulation than deeper, millennial-aged peat (catotelm), it is difficult to project how much mor
95 that simulates peat mass remaining in annual peat cohorts over millennia as a balance between monthly
96 e show that deep peat heating of a 2 m-thick peat column results in an exponential increase in CH4 em
97 coring difficulties posed by woody roots and peat compressibility, enabling retrieval of relatively u
98 bsorption spectroscopy (XAS) analysis of the peat confirmed that As was bound to NOM thiol groups and
99 few studies reporting the associated mass of peat consumed.
100                        We found that the old peat contribution to annual methane emissions was large
101                          We have collected a peat core 4 m long from the free-floating island of Post
102                                 An age-dated peat core collected near industries revealed that both S
103                                            A peat core from UTK provided a record of atmospheric depo
104 urce of PAHs to living moss, and among three peat core the contribution to PAHs from delayed petcoke
105 hagnum moss (24 sites, n = 68), in sectioned peat cores (4 sites, n = 161), and snow (7 sites, n = 19
106 asing temporal trends were detected in three peat cores collected closest to industrial activity.
107        In comparison to the surface layer of peat cores collected in recent years from across Canada,
108 enabling retrieval of relatively undisturbed peat cores dating back more than a century.
109               In this study, we analyzed two peat cores from southern Patagonia to calculate their lo
110            While the immobility of Pb in the peat cores may appear inconsistent with the elevated por
111                                              Peat cores were collected from five bogs in the vicinity
112 Ag, Cd, Sb, and Tl (in the top layers of the peat cores) are found at the control site (Utikuma) whic
113                                In total, six peat cores, three per study site, were studied that repr
114 in pigments and geochemical variables due to peat cutting and upland grazing prior to forest plantati
115                    Drying increases rates of peat decomposition and associated atmospheric and aquati
116 hs and varied depending on the peat type and peat decomposition stage rather than thermal state.
117 eposits beneath the swamp forest vegetation (peat defined as material with an organic matter content
118 s (15.0% of emissions from deforestation and peat degradation) to also include existing concessions (
119 r thousand, 1sigma) and recently accumulated peat (Delta(199)Hg = -0.22 +/- 0.06 per thousand, Delta(
120                  We discovered a 50-cm-thick peat deposit near Cape Rasmussen (65.2 degrees S), in th
121                                              Peat deposition and preservation allows some mangroves t
122                          However, effects of peat deposition in river ecosystems remain poorly unders
123 hange can cause significant soil erosion and peat deposition in rivers.
124 0.82-9.67 g/m(2) )-for the adverse impact of peat deposition on invertebrate community biodiversity.
125                                Consequently, peat deposits are potential records of past atmospheric
126                            We find extensive peat deposits beneath the swamp forest vegetation (peat
127 ales of centuries to millennia to create the peat deposits.
128                                 By anchoring peat-derived GEM dry deposition to modern atmospheric GE
129 erefore propose that the speciation of Zn in peat determines the isotope fingerprint in coal.
130 dustrial enrichment recorded in sediment and peat disagree by more than a factor of 10.
131 ssions factors for oil palm grown on drained peat do not account for temporal variation over the plan
132 ii) inundated forest swamp; and (iii) raised peat dome (since ca. 3.9 ka BP).
133 mulation and potentially a hiatus during the peat dome stage.
134 tate shifts (open water wetland-forest swamp-peat dome) suggests a potential climatic control on the
135 l controls on C accumulation in an Amazonian peat dome.
136 h their ultimate shape first at the edges of peat domes where they are bounded by rivers, so that the
137                  Conversely, in ombrotrophic peat domes, droughts may lead to reduced C accumulation
138 atic warming, culminating in collapse of the peat domes.
139  the supply of potable water downstream from peat-dominated catchments.
140 n the catchment and coastal plume of a small peat-draining river over a seasonal cycle.
141                              Conversely, the peat ecosystem was a source of carbon during both the dr
142         This is the thickest accumulation of peat ever found in a free-floating mire, yet it has form
143 ecreased V max and K m ) occurred in surface peat explained by variation in humic substances and phen
144 udy, we explored their oxidation kinetics in peat exposed to atmospheric O2 for up to 180 days under
145                             Based on the new peat extension and depth data, we estimate that tropical
146 o Basin in a recent synthesis of pantropical peat extent.
147 as consistently observed at agricultural and peat extraction areas throughout the seasons.
148   Release of pre-1950 carbon was detected at peat extraction, agricultural and drained sites, and was
149 m deforestation, degradation, harvesting and peat fires is estimated as 2.01 +/- 1.1 Pg annum(-1); wh
150 destabilized due to severe drainage and deep peat fires.
151 te, and monothioarsenate with purified model-peat, followed by As K-edge X-ray absorption spectroscop
152  Baja California have been accumulating root peat for nearly 2,000 y and harbor a belowground carbon
153                                     Tropical peat forests are a globally important reservoir of carbo
154  in contrast to the typical view of tropical peat forests which must have acted as net C sinks over t
155 e biophysical indices related to wetland and peat formation: (1) long-term water supply exceeding atm
156 d topographic contexts leave it as the least peat-forming continent.
157                            A transition from peat-forming Sphagnum moss to vascular plants has been o
158 n elevation trajectories-contrary to work in peat-forming wetlands showing elevation responses to cha
159 ples of cabbage (Brassica oleracea) grown in peat fortified with different concentrations of Se(IV) a
160 cubations show that only the top 20-30 cm of peat from experimental plots have higher CH4 production
161        We suggest values for the dry mass of peat fuel consumed that are 206 t ha(-1) for initial fir
162 , Suwannee River fulvic acid II, and Pahokee Peat fulvic acid.
163 from the Southern Carpathians, Romania using peat geochemistry.
164 )Cs: these show that the top 2 m of Sphagnum-peat has accumulated in only 100 years.
165                       Recently, near-surface peat has been used to assess the effect of current land
166  gradient in deep belowground warming ("Deep Peat Heat", DPH) on peat surface CO2 and CH4 fluxes.
167                            We show that deep peat heating of a 2 m-thick peat column results in an ex
168  , and CH4 primarily being sourced from deep peat horizons (2-4 m) near the mire's outlet.
169 BE obtained by photosensitization by Pahokee Peat Humic Acid (PPHA) and Suwannee River Fulvic Acid (S
170 rom the least to most inhibitive was Pahokee Peat humic acid, Elliot Soil humic acid, Suwannee River
171 transfer from reduced and nonreduced Pahokee Peat humic acids (PPHA) and fresh soil organic matter (S
172 us material than with Nordic NOM and Pahokee peat humic acids.
173 he AGB stocks of an OP plantation on drained peat in Malaysia from 3 to 12 years after planting using
174 ted plants was studied on 8000-year leftover peat in order to distinguish between soil-derived and at
175  deposits but mainly to extended but shallow peat in the Amazon Basin.
176                                              Peat inception was dated at 2750 cal.
177                              Sulfide-reacted peat increased sorption to 98%.
178 duce the temperature sensitivity (Q(10) ) of peat, indicating that these fires can inhibit microbial
179 9 ka BP), and developed in three stages: (i) peat initiated in an abandoned river channel with open w
180  oldest peatland yet discovered in Amazonia (peat initiation ca. 8.9 ka BP), and developed in three s
181 lm, which would lead to a slower transfer of peat into the catotelm, if any.
182                                         Most peat is found in cool climatic regions where unimpeded d
183                                  Strikingly, PEAT is located just upstream of the Pax1 gene.
184 can be compared to those from older, deeper, peat is mistaken - continued decomposition means that th
185  and logging activity on primary forests and peat lands after May 2011.
186 ted from a near-surface (0-38 cm) and a deep peat layer (200-250 cm) and studied by bulk As, Fe, and
187  provide evidence for the role of a sediment peat layer in releasing As.
188                                 Although the peat layer is relatively shallow (with a maximum depth o
189                      Nitrate was detected in peat layer porewater, and flow-through and batch experim
190                    Our results show that the peat layer, deposited about 8,000 years ago in a paleoma
191                                While surface peat layers (acrotelm) have a greater apparent rate of C
192                                     Although peat layers have been proposed as As sinks in earlier st
193                                              Peat layers within alluvial sediments are considered eff
194 ed in sediments, where they transformed into peat, lignite, and, finally, coal.
195 plicit investigation of fire-driven tropical peat loss and its variability.
196 lled, including blend or malt status, use of peated malt, alcohol strength, generic authentication an
197 odel with a monthly time step that simulates peat mass remaining in annual peat cohorts over millenni
198 ched with postbomb C compared with the solid peat material.
199 erence for the more labile C fraction in the peat matrix.
200 the surfaces of these particles and from the peat matrix.
201 controlled drought manipulation using intact peat 'mesocosm cores' taken from bog and fen habitats, a
202  Although temperature sensitivities for bulk peat methanogenesis were similar between open-water (Q(1
203                     We concluded that Arctic peat microbiota responds rapidly to increased temperatur
204 tropical peatlands by modifying the Holocene Peat Model (HPM), which has been successfully applied to
205 q on PEAT mutant embryos showed that loss of PEAT modestly increases bone morphogenetic protein targe
206 oid offspring in a population of the aquatic peat moss Sphagnum macrophyllum.
207  significance in the evolutionary history of peat mosses are discussed.
208                                              Peat mosses of the genus Sphagnum play a major role in g
209 ation of microbiome community composition in peat mosses.
210                                   RNA-seq on PEAT mutant embryos showed that loss of PEAT modestly in
211 low for formation of Sb-sulfur precipitates, peat NOM can sequester Sb in anoxic, sulfur-enriched env
212 ould further strengthen our understanding of peat OP AGB accumulation rates.
213      One such phenotype is the production of peat, or incompletely decomposed biomass, that accumulat
214 expected to mobilize northern permafrost and peat organic carbon (PP-C), yet magnitudes and system sp
215 hich ancient carbon stores laid down as moss peat over centuries or millennia are returned to the atm
216 e offset roughly half the carbon efflux from peat oxidation.
217 kx3-2 homolog Nkx3-1, the long-noncoding RNA PEAT (Pax1 enhancer antisense transcript) was induced in
218 sage of these elements and provide our Plant PEAT Peaks (3PEAT) model that predicts the presence of T
219      Ancient DNA (aDNA) from lake sediments, peats, permafrost soils, preserved megafaunal gut conten
220 68.35 degrees N, 19.05 degrees E), a thawing peat plateau in northern Sweden.
221 boreal lowlands, thawing forested permafrost peat plateaus ('forest') lead to expansion of permafrost
222 anee River Fulvic Acid (SRFA) standard and a peat pore water were used as representative dissolved NO
223 els such as Suwanee River (SRFA) and Pahokee peat (PPFA) fulvic acids purchased by the International
224                                     Internal peat processes (i.e., decomposition and mass loss) had a
225                   Interspecific variation in peat production is thought to be responsible for the est
226                             In contrast, the peat profile from HAR yielded greater concentrations of
227 h (14) C characterization of the catchment's peat profile of the same C species.
228 tent of DOC, CO2 , and CH4 across the entire peat profile was considerably enriched with postbomb C c
229  organic matter from potentially deep in the peat profile, facilitating liberation of ancient carbon
230              These data were supplemented by peat property (bulk density, carbon and nitrogen content
231 d-end analysis of transcription start sites (PEAT) protocol, providing millions of TSS locations from
232 CO2 -C + CH4 -C) from the active layer depth peat ranged from 77% larger to not significantly differe
233  in Sanjiang Plain (Northeast China) through peat record to better understand its long-term trend and
234 ort Hg stable isotope signatures in Pyrenean peat records (southwestern Europe) that are used as trac
235                                              Peat represents a globally significant pool of sequester
236              Furthermore, such plant-induced peat respiration could contribute up to 40% of ecosystem
237 mmediate radiative warming, carbon uptake in peat-rich sediments occurs over millennial timescales.
238 y monitoring the oxidation of phenols in one peat sample upon incubation with a phenol oxidase.
239 ide (CO2 ) and methane (CH4 ) emissions from peat samples collected at active layer and permafrost de
240  V, in comparison to the "cleanest", ancient peat samples ever tested from the northern hemisphere (c
241 rect evidence of Sb sequestration in natural peat samples is lacking.
242                                       Anoxic peat samples were collected from a near-surface (0-38 cm
243 ent approach, linking hydrological change in peat sediments from the Tibetan Plateau to changes in ar
244 lar layers are likely to be present in other peat sequences that are important for palaeoenvironmenta
245 litate rapid forest recovery, stimulation of peat soil development, and resilience to sea-level rise.
246  patterns of phenolic aromatic moieties of a peat soil fulvic acid, an operational fraction of humic
247 M extracted from three soils and a reference peat soil material to an iron (oxy)hydroxide mineral sur
248          We studied CH4 production of Arctic peat soil microbiota in anoxic microcosms over a tempera
249 ions between iron and HS during transit from peat soil to river mouth.
250 g endothelial cells) and environmental (e.g. peat soil) samples.
251 orbents included an organic matter (OM)-rich peat soil, an OM-poor clay soil, a hydrophilic Aldrich h
252 on (SOC) losses following permafrost thaw in peat soils across Alaska.
253 caused by a combination of low weathering in peat soils and accumulation of organophilic metals in pe
254                                              Peat soils are formed by the build-up of partially decom
255 ropical mountain peatlands contain extensive peat soils that have yet to be mapped or included in glo
256 uggests that converting drained agricultural peat soils to flooded land-use types can help reduce or
257             Our data suggest that Histosols (peat soils), which exhibit at least seasonally water-sat
258                                              Peat specific allometric equations for palm (R(2) = 0.92
259  that allows calculating the future catotelm peat storage based on today's acrotelm characteristics,
260  incubations show lower CO(2) emissions from peat subjected to low-severity fire and predict lower cu
261 nd the enrichment of organoarsenicals in the peat, suggesting that the importance of organometal(loid
262 lowground warming ("Deep Peat Heat", DPH) on peat surface CO2 and CH4 fluxes.
263 mine a shape parameter (the Laplacian of the peat surface elevation) that specifies, under a given ra
264 nging data set was used to develop a prefire peat surface modelling methodology, enabling the spatial
265 < .001) between carbon accumulation rate and peat surface moisture conditions: under dry conditions,
266 ighest postthaw emissions occurred from bare peat surfaces, a typical landform in permafrost peatland
267 gher reactivity of Sb(III) than Sb(V) toward peat surfaces.
268 cerning the possibility of sustainability of peat swamp exploitation via drainage-based agriculture t
269 t of fluvial organic carbon from both intact peat swamp forest and peat swamp forest subject to past
270  The simulated carbon loss caused by coastal peat swamp forest conversion into oil palm plantation wi
271 exchange between the atmosphere and tropical peat swamp forest in Sarawak, Malaysia using the eddy co
272 ditional net CO(2) losses from this tropical peat swamp forest in the absence of plant acclimation to
273 s suggest that conversion of Southeast Asian peat swamp forest is contributing between 16.6 and 27.9%
274 nstrate that emissions factors for converted peat swamp forest is in the range 70-117 t CO(2) eq ha(-
275  we analysed waters from intact and degraded peat swamp forest of Kalimantan, Indonesian Borneo, and
276 arbon from both intact peat swamp forest and peat swamp forest subject to past anthropogenic disturba
277                       Conversion of tropical peat swamp forest to drainage-based agriculture alters g
278 s of GHGs emitted during the conversion from peat swamp forest to oil palm plantation, accounting for
279                                     Tropical peat swamp forests (PSFs) are globally important carbon
280 arbon (C) pool of which 77% is stored in the peat swamp forests (PSFs) of Southeast Asia.
281                            Pristine tropical peat swamp forests (PSFs) represent a unique wetland eco
282                              Southeast-Asian peat swamp forests have been significantly logged and co
283 orted for temperate wet forests and tropical peat swamp forests, representing the largest non-ebullit
284 id C accumulation in some inundated tropical peat swamps, although this can lead ultimately to a shif
285                            Africa hosts more peat than previously reported but climatic and topograph
286 f fire to clear and prepare land on degraded peat, the Indonesian fire environment continues to have
287        By accreting on their own accumulated peat, these desert mangroves store large amounts of carb
288 emotely sensed data, we estimate the area of peat to be approximately 145,500 square kilometres (95 p
289 ting, but there is little loss of underlying peat to combustion.
290 ies and stabilization mechanisms would allow peat to persist in Antarctica, our results suggest that
291  releasing large amounts of carbon stored in peat to the atmosphere.
292  beneficial substitutions for fertilizer and peat, to its use as ADC.
293 ouse line bearing a complete deletion of the PEAT-transcribed unit.
294 ermafrost depths and varied depending on the peat type and peat decomposition stage rather than therm
295  by hydrogenotrophic methanogenesis but deep peat warming increased the delta(13) C of CH4 suggesting
296 on of Fe oxides driven by the degradation of peat, which is commonly found in the aquifer system.
297  These results suggest that although surface peat will respond to increasing temperature, the large r
298 weeks in aquaria containing DOM from a Carex peat with complexed mercury at initial concentrations of
299  four wheat varieties grown using soil, coco-peat with nutrient solution (CNS) and water (soaked (8 h
300 s alternative plantations and age classes on peat would further strengthen our understanding of peat

 
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