Increasing Contributions of Peatlands to Boreal Evapotranspiration in a Warming Climate
      
      
        
          
  
    
  
  
    
      
  
          Authors
              
              Manuel Helbig
          James Waddington
          Pavel Alekseychik
          Brian Amiro
          Mika Aurela
          Alan Barr
          Andrew Black
          Peter Blanken
          Sean Carey
          Jiquan Chen
          Jinshu Chi
          Ankur Desai
          Allison Dunn
          Eugenie Euskirchen
          Lawrence Flanagan
          Inke Forbrich
          Thomas Friborg
          Achim Grelle
          Silvie Harder
          Michal Heliasz
          Elyn Humphreys
          Hiroki Lkawa
          Pierre-Erik Isabelle
          Hiroki Iwata
          Rachhpal Jassal
          Mika Korkiakoski
          Juliya Kurbatova
          Lars Kutzbach
          Anders Lindroth
          Mikaell Ottosson Lofvenius
          Annalea Lohila
          Ivan Mammarella
          Philip Marsh
          Trofim Maximov
          Joe Melton
          Paul Moore
          Daniel Nadeau
          Erin Nicholls
          Mats Nilsson
          Takeshi Ohta
          Matthias Peichl
          Richard Petrone
          Roman Petrov
          Anatoly Prokushkin
          William Quinton
          David Reed
          Nigel Roulet
          Benjamin Runkle
          Oliver Sonnentag
          Ian Stachan
          Pierre Taillardat
          Eeva-Stiina Tuittila
          Juha-Pekka Tuovinen
          Jessica Turner
          Masahito Ueyama
          Andrej Varlagin
          Martin Wilmking
          Steven Wofsy
          Vyacheslav Zyianov
               
       
   
            The response of evapotranspiration (ET) to warming is of critical importance to the water and carbon cycle of the boreal biome, a mosaic of land cover types dominated by forests and peatlands. The effect of warming-induced vapour pressure deficit (VPD) increases on boreal ET remains poorly understood because peatlands are not specifically represented as plant functional types in Earth system models. Here we show that peatland ET increases more than forest ET with increasing VPD using observations from 95 eddy covariance tower sites. At high VPD of more than 2 kPa, peatland ET exceeds forest ET by up to 30%. Future (2091–2100) mid-growing season peatland ET is estimated to exceed forest ET by over 20% in about one-third of the boreal biome for RCP4.5 and about two-thirds for RCP8.5. Peatland-specific ET responses to VPD should therefore be included in Earth system models to avoid biases in water and carbon cycle projections