EGU21-12477, updated on 08 Jan 2024
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12477
EGU General Assembly 2021
© Author(s) 2024. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Ancient warming pushed wetlands across biogeochemical tipping points

Richard Pancost1, David Naafs1, Gordon Inglis2, and Vittoria Lauretano1
Richard Pancost et al.
  • 1University of Bristol, School of Earth Sciences, Bristol, United Kingdom
  • 2University of Southampton, School of Ocean and Earth Science, Southampton, United Kingdom

Ancient peat deposits provide valuable and complementary insight into the biogeochemical response of wetlands to climate perturbations, including potential tipping points in such systems. The combination of temperature (GDGTs) and hydrology (leaf wax hydrogen isotopic compositions) proxies with qualitative proxies for methanogenesis (archaeal lipid abundances) and methanotrophy (bacterial lipid carbon isotopic compositions) has revealed dramatic perturbations to the carbon cycle during transient warming events, including the Palaeocene Eocene Thermal Maximum.  Bacterially-derived hopanes in at least two PETM-spanning lignite sequences record negative carbon isotope excursions of near-unprecedented magnitude in response to rapid global warming.  The warming – either directly or indirectly – clearly caused a fundamental reorganisation of the carbon cycle in those ancient wetlands. Intriguingly however, these excursions persist for a far shorter duration than the PETM warming. Similarly, hopane δ13C values in lignites of the Early Eocene Climate Optimum, the warmth of which was reached more gradually, are similar to those of today. This suggests that these unusually isoptopically light hopanoids represent a transient disruption to the methane cycle associated with a climate perturbation rather than an equilibrium response to warmer temperatures.  Such an interpretation is consistent with Deglacial and Holocene peat-derived records, in which hopane δ13C values exhibit large responses to transient drying events and modest responses to longer-term change. Such findings could have implications for future climate change feedbacks, with the wetland methane cycle being particularly sensitive to the rate of climatic change.

How to cite: Pancost, R., Naafs, D., Inglis, G., and Lauretano, V.: Ancient warming pushed wetlands across biogeochemical tipping points, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12477, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12477, 2021.

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