ERIK MARTIN WILLÈN
Author of science fiction
Friday, January 30, 2026
Higher water levels could turn cultivated peatland in the North into a CO₂ sink - Earth - Earth Sciences - Environment
Northern lights over the experimental
trial site in Pasvik. Credit: Mikhail Mastepanov
In its natural state, peatland is
one of the largest carbon stores in nature. This is because the soil is so
waterlogged and low in oxygen that dead plant material breaks down very slowly.
The plants do not fully decompose but instead accumulate over thousands of
years, forming thick layers of peat. When a peatland is drained for
agricultural use, the water level drops and oxygen enters the peat layer.
Microorganisms can then break down the old plant material much faster,
releasing carbon that has been stored for many years as the greenhouse gas
carbon dioxide (CO₂).
Well-studied in the South, but not in the North
Since the 1600s, large peatland
areas in Europe and the Nordic region have been drained, and many studies have
investigated how drainage and changing water levels influence greenhouse gas
emissions. However, there is little knowledge about the northernmost drained
peatlands, where the climate is characterized by low temperatures, long, light
summer nights, and short growing seasons.
"From studies in warmer
regions, we know that raising the groundwater level in drained and cultivated
peatland often reduces CO₂ emissions, because the peat decomposes more
slowly," explains NIBIO researcher Junbin Zhao. "At the same time,
wetter and low-oxygen conditions can increase methane, since the microbes that
produce methane thrive when there is almost no oxygen in the soil."
Under certain conditions, nitrous
oxide emissions may also rise. This happens when the soil is moist but not
fully waterlogged, so that nitrogen breakdown stops halfway and produces
nitrous oxide instead of harmless nitrogen gas.
"Because each greenhouse gas
reacts differently to changes in water level, one gas can go down while another
goes up. That's why it's important to look at the overall gas balance,"
says Zhao. "We need to measure CO₂, methane, and nitrous oxide at the same time and
throughout the whole season to understand the real net effect in the
northernmost agricultural areas."
Two-year field trial in the Pasvik Valley, Finnmark
In 2022 and 2023, Zhao and
colleagues conducted an extensive field trial at NIBIO's station at Svanhovd in
the Pasvik Valley in Northern Norway. Automatic chambers measured CO₂, methane, and nitrous oxide emissions several times a
day throughout the growing season.
"The experiment included five
plots that together reflected typical management conditions found in a drained
agricultural field—with different groundwater levels, different amounts of
fertilizer, and different numbers of harvests per season," Zhao explains.
The results are published in the journal Global Change Biology.
The researchers wanted to answer
three questions:
1.
Can raising the groundwater level make a cultivated Arctic peatland close to
climate-neutral?
2.
Does the water level affect soil CO₂ emissions more than it affects plant CO₂ uptake?
3.
How do fertilization and harvesting influence the total climate balance?
High water levels reduced emissions
The results showed that when the
peatland in Pasvik was well drained, it emitted large amounts of CO₂—about the same as other cultivated peatlands further
south. However, when the groundwater was raised to 25–50 cm below the surface,
emissions dropped sharply.
"At these higher water levels,
methane and nitrous oxide emissions were also low, giving a much better overall
gas balance. Under such conditions, the field even absorbed slightly more CO₂ than it released," says Zhao.
High groundwater in cultivated
Arctic peatland may therefore be an effective climate measure.
"Our findings are especially
interesting because emissions were measured continuously around the clock. This
meant we captured short spikes of unusually high emissions and natural daily
fluctuations, details often missed when measurements are taken only
occasionally."
Works best in cold climates
When the groundwater is high, the
soil becomes wetter and oxygen levels in the root zone fall. Under these
conditions, plants are less active and take up less CO₂.
Even so, the total CO₂ emissions decrease in the field.
"This is because wet conditions mean that the field needs less light before it
starts to absorb more CO₂ than it releases. When this threshold is reached
earlier in the day, you get more hours with net carbon uptake," Zhao
explains. "Our calculations show that this effect is especially strong in
the north, due to the long, light summer nights. These provide many extra hours
where the system remains on the positive side, which can increase total CO₂ uptake significantly."
Temperature, however, proved to be
a key factor. The researchers found that when soil temperatures rose above about 12°C, microbial activity
increased.
"At higher temperatures,
microorganisms break down organic material faster, and both CO₂ and methane emissions rise," says Zhao.
"This means that the effect of high water levels is greatest in cool
climates—and that future warming could reduce the benefit. In practice, this
means water levels must be considered together with temperature and local
conditions."
Fertilization and harvesting: Balancing production and carbon
Fertilization and harvesting also
affected the climate balance. When the researchers applied more fertilizer, the
grass grew better. "More fertilizer produced more biomass but did not lead
to noticeable changes in CO₂ or methane emissions in our experiment," says
Zhao.
Harvesting, however, had a clear
effect. When the grass was cut and removed, carbon was removed from the system
because plants store carbon as they grow. "If harvesting is very frequent,
more carbon can be taken out than is built up again over time. The peat layer
may gradually lose carbon even when water levels are kept high," Zhao
explains.
He says it is therefore important
to consider water level, fertilization, and harvesting strategy together.
Measures that reduce emissions in the short term may reduce carbon storage in
the long term, which can weaken soil health.
"One solution could be paludiculture, i.e., growing plant species that tolerate wet
conditions so that biomass can be produced without keeping the soil dry."
Local variations can alter the climate balance
The researchers found large
differences in emissions within the same field. Some areas absorbed CO₂, while others released large amounts.
"Such local variation can greatly influence national climate accounting and how measures are designed, because one standard emission factor may not reflect reality everywhere," Zhao says. "The results from our study show a clear need for more detailed measurements and more precise water-level management in practice, especially where soils and farming conditions vary significantly between locations."
Provided by Norwegian Institute of
Bioeconomy Research
by Norwegian Institute of Bioeconomy
Research
edited by Lisa Lock, reviewed by Robert Egan
Source: Higher water levels could turn cultivated peatland in the North into a CO₂ sink

