Jeff Warburton1 and Martin Evans · Extent of blanket peat in the British Isles Source: Tallis et...
Transcript of Jeff Warburton1 and Martin Evans · Extent of blanket peat in the British Isles Source: Tallis et...
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Significance of macroscale peat flux for carbon export in upland fluvial systems
1 Department of Geography, Durham University, South Road, Durham, DH1 3LE, UK
2 Geography, School of Environment and Development, The University of Manchester, PO Box 88, Manchester, M60 1QD, UK
Jeff Warburton1 and Martin Evans2
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Fluvial peat material flux
• Transient – rapidly transported in the active channel zone – transported long distances
• Geomorphically significant – erosion and sedimentation
• Important for instream habitat: short‐term detrimental (fish kills); longer term new channel habitat and organic matter source
• Engineering problems – ‘management of flotation load’ e.g. culvert blockage, reservoir sedimentation and water quality
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Outline:
• Peat erosion and carbon
• Geomorphology of peat and upland sediment budgets
• In-channel transport and dynamics of eroded peat
– Fine material transport
– Peat block dynamics
• Preliminary results of a new project
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Peat
Extent of blanket peat in the British Isles
Source: Tallis et al. (1997)
Deposit of partially decomposed or undecomposed organic material derived from plants.
Accumulation > Decomposition
Waterlogged conditions
Peatlands cover 3 % of global land mass – mainly in higher lattitudes.
Contain 30% of global terrestrial carbon
Blanket mire – rain-fed peatlandterrain (1-3 m deep)
Low density material
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Moor House, Northern England (SEDIBUD Test Site)
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Moor House Carbon Budget
Arrows proportional to fluxes
neg
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Dissection & Gullying
Mass Movements & debris flows
Sheet & Wash Erosion
Suspended Load
Wind Erosion
Slope Deposits
Stream Course & Bank Erosion
Pipe erosion
Scar & Peat Margin Erosion
Bedload
Channel Sediments
Lakes & Reservoirs
HILLSLO
PECH
ANNEL
Streambank
Solute & Flotation Load
storage
process
Peatland Geomorphic System
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Channel Transport
Floodplain
Streamside Fans
Gully System
Intact Peat
Sediment yield 32.2 t
Channel Undercutting 12.8 t
Bank Erosion 51.7 t
Eroding Flats
Surface Wash 0.23 t
Wind Erosion 0.23 t
Overbank Deposition 31.9 t
Direct Fluvial Transfer 0.6 t
Gully Wall Erosion 8.6 tFluvial transport
gully floors 0.49 t
Wind Erosion of Gully Walls 1.7 t
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Transported organic matter
Allochthonous POM
PeriphytonCBOM
POM
FBOM
Peat block
CHANNEL
CATCHMENT
STREAM BED
Water surface
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Organic storage – Rough Sike (Moor House)
Loss on ignition values (%)
Channel sediment
4 – 7%
Peat banks
93 – 99%
Floodplain
14 – 26%
3 mm
Suspended sediment
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Microscopic counts of suspended organic matter collected in the three mass flux drift samplers (Crowe and Warburton, 2007)
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Peat Block Deposition Forms
Shadow Crescent Perched Armoured
Drape Embedded Cluster Step
Control of secondary and primary sedimentation
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Bed height (m)Water surface height (m) Peat block
-5
-4
-3
-2
-1
0
0 10 20 30 40 50
Distance along thalweg (m)
Hei
ght (
m)
Rough Sike Long Profile
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Flotation(Dp < d)
Rolling (d < Dp > d/2)
Deposition (Dp > d/2)
Dp
d
Swelling and slaking Abrasion and splitting Weathering
Saltation
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Paet Block Transport Mechanisms
0
20
40
60
80
100
0 0.05 0.1 0.15 0.2
Block size (m)
Per
cent
age
of ti
me Rolling
Floating
Stopped
Mean flow depth = 0.24 m
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New ProjectMonitoring Framework
Three scales:
Macro
Meso
Micro
18 month period
Aim: to determine the significance of peat block transport in the catchmentmaterial flux
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0
0.1
0.2
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0.5
0.6
0.7
0.8
0.9
1
0
50
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150
200
250
300
350
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Stag
e (m
)
Turb
idity
(NTU
)
Turbidity (NTU) Stage (m)
Nether Hearth 8 June to 7 August 2008
Fine peat dynamics
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Nether Hearth June 8 to 7 August 2008
1
10
100
1000
10 100Stage (cm)
Turb
idity
(NTU
)
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Peat block dynamics - experiment: three-axis accelerometer
Large blockc.170 mm
Small blockc.100 mm
River reach 34 m (pool, riffle)
Slope 1.5°
Width 4-6 m
Depth 0.12 – 0.34 m
Discharge 0.9 m3 s-1
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Peat block tracking results
Channel depth
Distance downstream
Large Block
Small Block
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0
50
100
150
200
250
300
350
400
450
0 200 400 600 800 1000
Distance (m)
Blo
ck w
eigh
t (g)
Run 1 Run 2 Run 3
Extremely rapid peat block abrasion – experimental studies
0.6 m s-1 0.98 m s-1 0.98 m s-1
Frozen
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Conclusions
1. Peat erosion is an important process in many upland areas and isimportant for terrestrial carbon loss
2. Because of the special character of peat – transport dynamics differ markedly from mineral sediments
3. In constructing sediment budgets this needs to be acknowledged and appropriate measurement techniques developed
4. Peat block transport (BOC) has not been fully measured in eroding peatlands and is not included in terrestrial upland carbon budgets
5. The preliminary results described here have the potential to evaluate the significance of this component and better understand its transport dynamics
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Acknowledgements
Environment Agency
UK Environmental Change Network
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Geosystem properties
High water content
Permeability
Bulk density
Organic content
Micromorphology
Gas content
pH
Geotechnical properties
Index properties
Consolidation (Primary and Secondary)
Mechanical properties ‐ organic matter
Flow properties
Creep
Shrinkage & desiccation
Thermal behaviour
Peat Characteristics
These properties control the nature of physical processes
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0
50
100
150
200
250
0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160
Distance from source (m)
Bar 3 Bar 4Bar 2Bar 1
Blo
ck s
ize
b ax
is (c
m)
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Peat Block Initial Motion
+ Logger
Peat block
Float switch