Stability of fen and bog peatland types over the Holocene Epoch in the
Hudson Bay Lowlands, Canada
Abstract
The Hudson Bay Lowlands (HBL) is a vast continuous peatland in Northern
Canada. The landscape is a mosaic of mostly bogs and fens, with more
limited swamp, marsh, forest and open water. Owing to rapid rates of
isostatic uplift, younger peats are found closer to the coasts of Hudson
and James Bays, with fen-type peatlands somewhat more prevalent on these
younger surfaces. More than 30 Pg of carbon have accumulated in the HBL
over the Holocene. The rates of Holocene carbon accumulation vary
considerably both spatially and temporally, with some sites showing more
rapid rates of carbon accumulation in the first 2-3 millennia following
peatland initiation. We evaluate here the hypothesis that vegetation
changes over the course of the Holocene, including fen-to-bog
transitions, partially explain the variability in carbon accumulation.
We find that in some cases, more rapid rates of C accumulation in the
middle Holocene (5000-8000 yrs before present) are associated with early
successional minerotrophic fens with higher carbon densities. Fen-to-bog
transitions are recorded in many peat cores collected from present day
bogs; however, these transitions are time transgressive, and can depend
on the time since initiation, suggesting that climate changes may play a
secondary role, relative to hydrological changes and local ecological
processes. Fens are highly prevalent in the HBL landscape (covering
about 38% of land cover). Cores taken from present day fens and
analyzed for carbon accumulation and vegetation change indicate that
many fen sites have remained fens since peat initiation. Variability in
rates of Holocene carbon accumulation within fen records which have not
been subject to any major vegetation change may more closely reflect
climate drivers.