Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

The forested swamps of the central Congo Basin store approximately 30 billion metric tonnes of carbon in peat. Little is known about the vulnerability of these carbon stocks. Here we investigate this vulnerability using peat cores from a large interfluvial basin in the Republic of the Congo and palaeoenvironmental methods. We find that peat accumulation began at least at 17,500 calibrated years before present (cal. yr BP; taken as AD 1950). Our data show that the peat that accumulated between around 7,500 to around 2,000 cal. yr BP is much more decomposed compared with older and younger peat. Hydrogen isotopes of plant waxes indicate a drying trend, starting at approximately 5,000 cal. yr BP and culminating at approximately 2,000 cal. yr BP, coeval with a decline in dominant swamp forest taxa. The data imply that the drying climate probably resulted in a regional drop in the water table, which triggered peat decomposition, including the loss of peat carbon accumulated prior to the onset of the drier conditions. After approximately 2,000 cal. yr BP, our data show that the drying trend ceased, hydrologic conditions stabilized and peat accumulation resumed. This reversible accumulation-loss-accumulation pattern is consistent with other peat cores across the region, indicating that the carbon stocks of the central Congo peatlands may lie close to a climatically driven drought threshold. Further research should quantify the combination of peatland threshold behaviour and droughts driven by anthropogenic carbon emissions that may trigger this positive carbon cycle feedback in the Earth system.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9729114PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41586-022-05389-3DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

central congo
12
peat
9
peat carbon
8
congo basin
8
carbon stocks
8
peat accumulation
8
carbon
7
hydroclimatic vulnerability
4
vulnerability peat
4
carbon central
4

Similar Publications

Genomic epidemiology of clade Ia monkeypox viruses circulating in the Central African Republic in 2022-24: a retrospective cross-sectional study.

Lancet Microbe

September 2025

Institut Pasteur de Bangui, Bangui, Central African Republic; Faculty of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, University of Yaoundé I, Yaoundé, Cameroon. Electronic address:

Background: The spread of monkeypox virus (Orthopoxvirus monkeypox) clade Ib from the Democratic Republic of the Congo to neighbouring countries has raised global concerns, leading to WHO declaring mpox a public health emergency on Aug 14, 2024. We applied genomic epidemiology to investigate the causes of recurrent mpox outbreaks in the Central African Republic. We aimed to determine whether frequent zoonotic spillovers or increased human-to-human transmissions are driving mpox epidemiology.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: A growing body of research supports the influence of gender norms on adolescent mental health globally. There is a lack of qualitative studies, however, that elicit adolescents' own perspectives on these issues across diverse cross-cultural environments. The current study seeks to address these gaps through a qualitative exploration of gendered influences on mental health among adolescents living in 13 countries.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Most low- and middle-income countries face significant public health challenges, exacerbated by the lack of reliable demographic data supporting effective planning and intervention. In such data-scarce settings, statistical models combining geolocated survey data with geospatial datasets enable the estimation of population counts at high spatial resolution in the absence of dependable demographic data sources. This study introduces a Bayesian model jointly estimating building and population counts, combining geolocated survey data and gridded geospatial datasets.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Amyloidosis is a rare disease, often secondary to chronic inflammation or autoimmune disorders, with an unclear etiology in some cases. Herein, we report a 67-year-old male patient presenting with recurrent abdominal pain and multi-system involvement. The diagnosis of AA amyloidosis was confirmed by Congo red staining of small intestinal mucosal and bone marrow biopsies.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction And Importance: Hip dislocations excluding the anterior, posterior or central variety have rarely been published. We report an atypical and unclassifiable dislocation of the hip joint with incarceration of the capsule and labrum. The aim of the presentation was to describe an uncommon type of hip dislocation with entrapment of the soft tissue.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF