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Dive into the research topics where Matthew J. Amesbury is active.

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Featured researches published by Matthew J. Amesbury.


The Holocene | 2014

A Database and Synthesis of Northern Peatland Soil Properties and Holocene Carbon and Nitrogen Accumulation

Julie Loisel; Zicheng Yu; David W. Beilman; Philip Camill; Jukka Alm; Matthew J. Amesbury; David E. Anderson; Sofia Andersson; Christopher Bochicchio; Keith Barber; Lisa R. Belyea; Joan Bunbury; Frank M. Chambers; Dan J. Charman; François De Vleeschouwer; Barbara Fiałkiewicz-Kozieł; Sarah A. Finkelstein; Mariusz Gałka; Michelle Garneau; Dan Hammarlund; William Hinchcliffe; James R. Holmquist; P.D.M. Hughes; Miriam C. Jones; Eric S. Klein; Ulla Kokfelt; Atte Korhola; Peter Kuhry; Alexandre Lamarre; Mariusz Lamentowicz

Here, we present results from the most comprehensive compilation of Holocene peat soil properties with associated carbon and nitrogen accumulation rates for northern peatlands. Our database consists of 268 peat cores from 215 sites located north of 45°N. It encompasses regions within which peat carbon data have only recently become available, such as the West Siberia Lowlands, the Hudson Bay Lowlands, Kamchatka in Far East Russia, and the Tibetan Plateau. For all northern peatlands, carbon content in organic matter was estimated at 42 ± 3% (standard deviation) for Sphagnum peat, 51 ± 2% for non-Sphagnum peat, and at 49 ± 2% overall. Dry bulk density averaged 0.12 ± 0.07 g/cm3, organic matter bulk density averaged 0.11 ± 0.05 g/cm3, and total carbon content in peat averaged 47 ± 6%. In general, large differences were found between Sphagnum and non-Sphagnum peat types in terms of peat properties. Time-weighted peat carbon accumulation rates averaged 23 ± 2 (standard error of mean) g C/m2/yr during the Holocene on the basis of 151 peat cores from 127 sites, with the highest rates of carbon accumulation (25–28 g C/m2/yr) recorded during the early Holocene when the climate was warmer than the present. Furthermore, we estimate the northern peatland carbon and nitrogen pools at 436 and 10 gigatons, respectively. The database is publicly available at https://peatlands.lehigh.edu.


Geology | 2014

Transatlantic distribution of the Alaskan White River Ash

Britta J.L. Jensen; Sean Pyne-O’Donnell; Gill Plunkett; Duane G. Froese; P.D.M. Hughes; Michael Sigl; Joseph R. McConnell; Matthew J. Amesbury; Paul G. Blackwell; Christel van den Bogaard; Caitlin E. Buck; Dan J. Charman; John J. Clague; Valerie A. Hall; Johannes Koch; Helen Mackay; Gunnar Mallon; Lynsey McColl; Jonathan R. Pilcher

Volcanic ash layers preserved within the geologic record represent precise time markers that correlate disparate depositional environments and enable the investigation of synchronous and/or asynchronous behaviors in Earth system and archaeological sciences. However, it is generally assumed that only exceptionally powerful events, such as supereruptions (≥450 km3 of ejecta as dense-rock equivalent; recurrence interval of ∼105 yr), distribute ash broadly enough to have an impact on human society, or allow us to address geologic, climatic, and cultural questions on an intercontinental scale. Here we use geochemical, age, and morphological evidence to show that the Alaskan White River Ash (eastern lobe; A.D. 833–850) correlates to the “AD860B” ash (A.D. 846–848) found in Greenland and northern Europe. These occurrences represent the distribution of an ash over 7000 km, linking marine, terrestrial, and ice-core records. Our results indicate that tephra from more moderate-size eruptions, with recurrence intervals of ∼100 yr, can have substantially greater distributions than previously thought, with direct implications for volcanic dispersal studies, correlation of widely distributed proxy records, and volcanic hazard assessment.


Current Biology | 2013

Plants and soil microbes respond to recent warming on the Antarctic Peninsula.

Jessica Royles; Matthew J. Amesbury; Peter Convey; Howard Griffiths; Dominic A. Hodgson; Melanie J. Leng; Dan J. Charman

Annual temperatures on the Antarctic Peninsula, one of the most rapidly warming regions on Earth, have risen by up to 0.56°C per decade since the 1950s. Terrestrial and marine organisms have shown changes in populations and distributions over this time, suggesting that the ecology of the Antarctic Peninsula is changing rapidly. However, these biological records are shorter in length than the meteorological data, and observed population changes cannot be securely linked to longer-term trends apparent in paleoclimate data. We developed a unique time series of past moss growth and soil microbial activity from a 150-year-old moss bank at the southern limit of significant plant growth based on accumulation rates, cellulose δ(13)C, and fossil testate amoebae. We show that growth rates and microbial productivity have risen rapidly since the 1960s, consistent with temperature changes, although recently they may have stalled. The recent increase in terrestrial plant growth rates and soil microbial activity are unprecedented in the last 150 years and are consistent with climate change. Future changes in terrestrial biota are likely to track projected temperature increases closely and will fundamentally change the ecology and appearance of the Antarctic Peninsula.


Scientific Reports | 2016

The long-term fate of permafrost peatlands under rapid climate warming.

Graeme T. Swindles; Paul J. Morris; Donal Mullan; Elizabeth J. Watson; T. Edward Turner; Thomas P. Roland; Matthew J. Amesbury; Ulla Kokfelt; Kristian Schoning; Steve Pratte; Angela V. Gallego-Sala; Dan J. Charman; Nicole K. Sanderson; Michelle Garneau; Jonathan L. Carrivick; Clare Woulds; Joseph Holden; Lauren Parry; Jennifer M. Galloway

Permafrost peatlands contain globally important amounts of soil organic carbon, owing to cold conditions which suppress anaerobic decomposition. However, climate warming and permafrost thaw threaten the stability of this carbon store. The ultimate fate of permafrost peatlands and their carbon stores is unclear because of complex feedbacks between peat accumulation, hydrology and vegetation. Field monitoring campaigns only span the last few decades and therefore provide an incomplete picture of permafrost peatland response to recent rapid warming. Here we use a high-resolution palaeoecological approach to understand the longer-term response of peatlands in contrasting states of permafrost degradation to recent rapid warming. At all sites we identify a drying trend until the late-twentieth century; however, two sites subsequently experienced a rapid shift to wetter conditions as permafrost thawed in response to climatic warming, culminating in collapse of the peat domes. Commonalities between study sites lead us to propose a five-phase model for permafrost peatland response to climatic warming. This model suggests a shared ecohydrological trajectory towards a common end point: inundated Arctic fen. Although carbon accumulation is rapid in such sites, saturated soil conditions are likely to cause elevated methane emissions that have implications for climate-feedback mechanisms.


Current Biology | 2017

Widespread Biological Response to Rapid Warming on the Antarctic Peninsula

Matthew J. Amesbury; Thomas P. Roland; Jessica Royles; Dominic A. Hodgson; Peter Convey; Howard Griffiths; Dan J. Charman

Recent climate change on the Antarctic Peninsula is well documented [1-5], with warming, alongside increases in precipitation, wind strength, and melt season length [1, 6, 7], driving environmental change [8, 9]. However, meteorological records mostly began in the 1950s, and paleoenvironmental datasets that provide a longer-term context to recent climate change are limited in number and often from single sites [7] and/or discontinuous in time [10, 11]. Here we use moss bank cores from a 600-km transect from Green Island (65.3°S) to Elephant Island (61.1°S) as paleoclimate archives sensitive to regional temperature change, moderated by water availability and surface microclimate [12, 13]. Mosses grow slowly, but cold temperatures minimize decomposition, facilitating multi-proxy analysis of preserved peat [14]. Carbon isotope discrimination (Δ13C) in cellulose indicates the favorability of conditions for photosynthesis [15]. Testate amoebae are representative heterotrophs in peatlands [16-18], so their populations are an indicator of microbial productivity [14]. Moss growth and mass accumulation rates represent the balance between growth and decomposition [19]. Analyzing these proxies in five cores at three sites over 150 years reveals increased biological activity over the past ca. 50 years, in response to climate change. We identified significant changepoints in all sites and proxies, suggesting fundamental and widespread changes in the terrestrial biosphere. The regional sensitivity of moss growth to past temperature rises suggests that terrestrial ecosystems will alter rapidly under future warming, leading to major changes in the biology and landscape of this iconic region-an Antarctic greening to parallel well-established observations in the Arctic [20].


Oecologia | 2016

Moss stable isotopes (carbon-13, oxygen-18) and testate amoebae reflect environmental inputs and microclimate along a latitudinal gradient on the Antarctic Peninsula.

Jessica Royles; Matthew J. Amesbury; Thomas P. Roland; Glyn D. Jones; Peter Convey; Howard Griffiths; Dominic A. Hodgson; Dan J. Charman

The stable isotope compositions of moss tissue water (δ2H and δ18O) and cellulose (δ13C and δ18O), and testate amoebae populations were sampled from 61 contemporary surface samples along a 600-km latitudinal gradient of the Antarctic Peninsula (AP) to provide a spatial record of environmental change. The isotopic composition of moss tissue water represented an annually integrated precipitation signal with the expected isotopic depletion with increasing latitude. There was a weak, but significant, relationship between cellulose δ18O and latitude, with predicted source water inputs isotopically enriched compared to measured precipitation. Cellulose δ13C values were dependent on moss species and water content, and may reflect site exposure to strong winds. Testate amoebae assemblages were characterised by low concentrations and taxonomic diversity, with Corythion dubium and Microcorycia radiata types the most cosmopolitan taxa. The similarity between the intra- and inter-site ranges measured in all proxies suggests that microclimate and micro-topographical conditions around the moss surface were important determinants of proxy values. Isotope and testate amoebae analyses have proven value as palaeoclimatic, temporal proxies of climate change, whereas this study demonstrates that variations in isotopic and amoeboid proxies between microsites can be beyond the bounds of the current spatial variability in AP climate.


Protist | 2017

Taxonomic Implications of Morphological Complexity Within the Testate Amoeba Genus Corythion from the Antarctic Peninsula

Thomas P. Roland; Matthew J. Amesbury; David M. Wilkinson; Dan J. Charman; Peter Convey; Dominic A. Hodgson; Jessica Royles; Steffen Clauß; Eckhard Völcker

Precise and sufficiently detailed morphological taxonomy is vital in biology, for example in the accurate interpretation of ecological and palaeoecological datasets, especially in polar regions, where biodiversity is poor. Testate amoebae on the Antarctic Peninsula (AP) are well-documented and variations in their population size have recently been interpreted as a proxy for microbial productivity changes in response to recent regional climate change. AP testate amoeba assemblages are dominated by a small number of globally ubiquitous taxa. We examine morphological variation in Corythion spp. across the AP, finding clear evidence supporting the presence of two morphospecies. Corythion constricta (Certes 1889) was identified on the AP for the first time and has potentially been previously misidentified. Furthermore, a southerly trend of decreasing average test size in Corythion dubium (Taránek 1881) along the AP suggests adaptive polymorphism, although the precise drivers of this remain unclear, with analysis hindered by limited environmental data. Further work into morphological variation in Corythion is needed elsewhere, alongside molecular analyses, to evaluate the potential for (pseudo)cryptic diversity within the genus. We advocate a parsimonious taxonomical approach that recognises genetic diversity but also examines and develops accurate morphological divisions and descriptions suitable for light microscopy-based ecological and palaeoecological studies.


Nature Climate Change | 2018

Latitudinal limits to the predicted increase of the peatland carbon sink with warming

Angela V. Gallego-Sala; Dan J. Charman; Simon Brewer; Susan E. Page; I. Colin Prentice; Pierre Friedlingstein; Steve Moreton; Matthew J. Amesbury; David W. Beilman; Svante Björck; Tatiana Blyakharchuk; Christopher Bochicchio; Robert K. Booth; Joan Bunbury; Philip Camill; Donna Carless; Rodney A. Chimner; Michael Clifford; Elizabeth Cressey; Colin Courtney-Mustaphi; François De Vleeschouwer; Rixt de Jong; Barbara Fiałkiewicz-Kozieł; Sarah A. Finkelstein; Michelle Garneau; Esther N. Githumbi; John Hribjlan; James R. Holmquist; P.D.M. Hughes; Chris D. Jones

The carbon sink potential of peatlands depends on the balance of carbon uptake by plants and microbial decomposition. The rates of both these processes will increase with warming but it remains unclear which will dominate the global peatland response. Here we examine the global relationship between peatland carbon accumulation rates during the last millennium and planetary-scale climate space. A positive relationship is found between carbon accumulation and cumulative photosynthetically active radiation during the growing season for mid- to high-latitude peatlands in both hemispheres. However, this relationship reverses at lower latitudes, suggesting that carbon accumulation is lower under the warmest climate regimes. Projections under Representative Concentration Pathway (RCP)2.6 and RCP8.5 scenarios indicate that the present-day global sink will increase slightly until around ad 2100 but decline thereafter. Peatlands will remain a carbon sink in the future, but their response to warming switches from a negative to a positive climate feedback (decreased carbon sink with warming) at the end of the twenty-first century.Analysis of peatland carbon accumulation over the last millennium and its association with global-scale climate space indicates an ongoing carbon sink into the future, but with decreasing strength as conditions warm.


European Journal of Protistology | 2018

Successional change of testate amoeba assemblages along a space-for-time sequence of peatland development

Hui Zhang; Minna Väliranta; Matthew J. Amesbury; Dan J. Charman; A. Laine; Eeva-Stiina Tuittila

It is well established that in ombrotrophic bogs, water-table depth (WTD) is the primary environmental control on testate amoeba distribution. However, the environmental controls on testate amoebae in minerotrophic fens are less well known and successional change in their assemblages associated with fen-bog peatland development has been scarcely investigated. Here we investigate a peatland space-for-time sequence resulting from postglacial rebound on the west coast of Finland, to assess successional patterns in testate amoeba communities and their relationships with environmental variables during peatland development. Sample sites along a 10-km transect from coast to inland ranged from a recently emerged wet meadow to a mature bog. Environmental variables (e.g., peat thickness, carbon and nitrogen content, pH, WTD and vegetation) were measured alongside testate amoeba samples. Results showed that even though the distribution of testate amoebae was to some extent determined by the succession stage, many taxa had wide WTD and pH ranges. The primary environmental control for many taxa changed along the succession. In conclusion, the ecological constraints on testate amoebae in minerotrophic systems are more complex than in bogs. The detected patterns also complicate the use of testate amoebae as a primary proxy in palaeoecological reconstructions where fen-to-bog shifts occur.


Earth-Science Reviews | 2013

Centennial-scale climate change in Ireland during the Holocene

Graeme T. Swindles; Ian T. Lawson; Ian P. Matthews; Maarten Blaauw; T.J. Daley; Dan J. Charman; Thomas P. Roland; Gill Plunkett; Georg Schettler; Benjamin R. Gearey; T. Edward Turner; Heidi A. Rea; Helen Roe; Matthew J. Amesbury; Frank M. Chambers; Jonathan A. Holmes; Fraser J.G. Mitchell; Jeffrey J. Blackford; Antony Blundell; Nicholas Branch; Jane Holmes; Peter G. Langdon; Julia McCarroll; Frank McDermott; Pirita Oksanen; Oliver G. Pritchard; Phil Stastney; Bettina Stefanini; Dan Young; Jane Wheeler

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P.D.M. Hughes

University of Southampton

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T.J. Daley

Plymouth State University

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Michelle Garneau

Université du Québec à Montréal

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