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Dive into the research topics where Ulla Kokfelt is active.

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Featured researches published by Ulla Kokfelt.


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.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2010

Quantifying the relative importance of lake emissions in the carbon budget of a subarctic catchment

Jan Karlsson; Torben R. Christensen; Patrick M. Crill; Johannes Förster; Dan Hammarlund; Marcin Jackowicz-Korczynski; Ulla Kokfelt; Charlotte L. Roehm; Peter Rosén

Climate change and thawing of permafrost will likely result in increased decomposition of terrestrial organic carbon and subsequent carbon emissions to the atmosphere from terrestrial and aquatic systems. The quantitative importance of mineralization of terrestrial organic carbon in lakes in relation to terrestrial carbon fluxes is poorly understood and a serious drawback for the understanding of carbon budgets. We studied a subarctic lake in an area of discontinuous permafrost to assess the quantitative importance of lake carbon emission for the catchment carbon balance. Estimates of net ecosystem production and stable carbon-isotope composition of dissolved organic carbon in the lake water suggest substantial input and respiration of terrestrial organic carbon in the lake. The lake was a net source of CO2 and CH4 to the atmosphere at ice breakup in spring and during the whole ice-free period. The carbon emission from the lake was similar in magnitude to the terrestrial net release of carbon to the atmosphere. The results indicate that lakes are important sources of catchment carbon emission, potentially increasing the positive feedback from permafrost thawing on global warming.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Effects of permafrost aggradation on peat properties as determined from a pan-Arctic synthesis of plant macrofossils

Claire C. Treat; Miriam C. Jones; Philip Camill; Angela V. Gallego-Sala; Michelle Garneau; Jennifer W. Harden; Gustaf Hugelius; Eric S. Klein; Ulla Kokfelt; Peter Kuhry; Julie Loisel; Paul Mathijssen; Jonathan A. O'Donnell; Pirita Oksanen; Tiina Ronkainen; A. B. K. Sannel; Julie Talbot; Charles Tarnocai; Minna Väliranta

Permafrost dynamics play an important role in high-latitude peatland carbon balance and are key to understanding the future response of soil carbon stocks. Permafrost aggradation can control the magnitude of the carbon feedback in peatlands through effects on peat properties. We compiled peatland plant macrofossil records for the northern permafrost zone (515 cores from 280 sites) and classified samples by vegetation type and environmental class (fen, bog, tundra and boreal permafrost, and thawed permafrost). We examined differences in peat properties (bulk density, carbon (C), nitrogen (N) and organic matter content, and C/N ratio) and C accumulation rates among vegetation types and environmental classes. Consequences of permafrost aggradation differed between boreal and tundra biomes, including differences in vegetation composition, C/N ratios, and N content. The vegetation composition of tundra permafrost peatlands was similar to permafrost-free fens, while boreal permafrost peatlands more closely resembled permafrost-free bogs. Nitrogen content in boreal permafrost and thawed permafrost peatlands was significantly lower than in permafrost-free bogs despite similar vegetation types (0.9% versus 1.5% N). Median long-term C accumulation rates were higher in fens (23g C m(-2)yr(-1)) than in permafrost-free bogs (18g C m(-2)yr(-1)) and were lowest in boreal permafrost peatlands (14g C m(-2)yr(-1)). The plant macrofossil record demonstrated transitions from fens to bogs to permafrost peatlands, bogs to fens, permafrost aggradation within fens, and permafrost thaw and reaggradation. Using data synthesis, we have identified predominant peatland successional pathways, changes in vegetation type, peat properties, and C accumulation rates associated with permafrost aggradation.


Changing Climates, Earth Systems, and Society; pp 85-122 (2010) | 2010

Climate and peatlands

Rixt de Jong; Maarten Blaauw; Frank M. Chambers; Torben R. Christensen; François De Vleeschouwer; Walter Finsinger; Stefan Fronzek; Margareta Johansson; Ulla Kokfelt; Mariusz Lamentowicz; Gaël Le Roux; Dmitri Mauquoy; Edward A. D. Mitchell; Jonathan E. Nichols; Emanuela Samaritani; Bas van Geel

Peatlands are an important natural archive for past climatic changes, primarily due to their sensitivity to changes in the water balance and the dating possibilities of peat sediments. In addition, peatlands are an important sink as well as potential source of greenhouse gases. The first part of this chapter discusses a range of well-established and novel proxies studied in peat cores (peat humification, macrofossils, testate amoebae, stomatal records from subfossil leaves, organic biomarkers and stable isotope ratios, aeolian sediment influx and geochemistry) that are used for climatic and environmental reconstructions, as well as recent developments in the dating of these sediments. The second part focuses on the role that peatland ecosystems may play as a source or sink of greenhouse gases. Emphasis is placed on the past and future development of peatlands in the discontinuous permafrost areas of northern Scandinavia, and the role of regenerating mined peatlands in north-western Europe as a carbon sink or source.


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.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2010

Lead contamination of subarctic lakes and its response to reduced atmospheric fallout: can the recovery process be counteracted by the ongoing climate change?

Jonatan Klaminder; Dan Hammarlund; Ulla Kokfelt; Jorien E. Vonk; Christian Bigler

Can a climate-triggered export of old contaminants from the soil alter the lead (Pb) contaminant burden of subarctic lakes? To address this question, we reconstructed the pollution history of three high latitude lakes situated in a region where a recent climatic shift has occurred. Dated sediment records were used as archives of past Pb inputs to the lakes, where the difference in the (206)Pb/(207)Pb ratio between atmospheric contaminants ((206)Pb/(207)Pb ratio <1.16) and geogenic Pb in the catchment soil ((206)Pb/(207)Pb ratio >1.22) were used to trace fluxes of Pb contaminants. Lead contaminants were found in sediments deposited since Roman times. A significant export of Pb from the soil contaminant pool is indicated in two of the lakes surrounded by near-shore permafrost soils. Here, levels of Pb contaminants and (206)Pb/(207)Pb ratios of sediments deposited after the 1970s appear not to have been strongly affected by the >or=90% reduction in atmospheric deposition rates and increasing (206)Pb/(207)Pb ratios of atmospheric Pb since the 1990s. We concluded that soil processes stimulated by the ongoing climate change at high latitudes might work counteractive to efforts to reduce contaminant levels in subarctic lakes.


The Holocene | 2013

Solar forcing of climate during the last millennium recorded in lake sediments from northern Sweden

Ulla Kokfelt; Raimund Muscheler

We report on a sediment record from a small lake within the subarctic wetland complex Stordalen in northernmost Sweden covering the last 1000 years. Variations in the content of minerogenic material are found to follow reconstructed variations in the activity of the Sun between the 13th and 18th centuries. Periods of low solar activity are associated with minima in minerogenic material and vice versa. A comparison between the sunspot cycle and a long instrumental series of summer precipitation further reveals a link between the 11 yr solar cycle and summer precipitation variability since around 1960. Solar minima are in this period associated with minima in summer precipitation, whereas the amount of summer precipitation increases during periods with higher solar activity. Our results suggest that the climate responds to both the 11 yr solar cycle and to long-term changes in solar activity and in particular solar minima, causing dry conditions with resulting decreased runoff.


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.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2010

A new climate era in the sub‐Arctic: Accelerating climate changes and multiple impacts

Terry V. Callaghan; Fredrik Bergholm; Torben R. Christensen; Christer Jonasson; Ulla Kokfelt; Margareta Johansson


Climate of The Past | 2010

Holocene land-cover reconstructions for studies on land cover-climate feedbacks

Marie-José Gaillard; Shinya Sugita; Florence Mazier; Anna-Kari Trondman; Anna Broström; Thomas Hickler; Jed O. Kaplan; Erik Kjellström; Ulla Kokfelt; Petr Kuneš; C. Lemmen; Paul A. Miller; Jörgen Olofsson; Anneli Poska; Mats Rundgren; Benjamin Smith; Gustav Strandberg; Ralph Fyfe; Anne Birgitte Nielsen; Teija Alenius; L. Balakauskas; Lena Barnekow; H. J. B. Birks; Anne E. Bjune; Leif Björkman; Thomas Giesecke; Kari Loe Hjelle; L. Kalnina; Mihkel Kangur; W.O. van der Knaap

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Michelle Garneau

Université du Québec à Montréal

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Eric S. Klein

University of Alaska Anchorage

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