After drainage of natural boreal peatlands, the decomposition of organic ma
tter increases and peat soil may turn into a net source of CO2 and N2O, whe
reas CH4 emission is known to decrease. Afforestation is a potential mitiga
tion strategy to reduce greenhouse gas emission from organic agricultural s
oils. A static chamber technique was used to evaluate the fluxes of CH4, N2
O and CO2 from three boreal organic agricultural soils in western Finland,
afforested 1, 6 or 23 years before this study. The mean emissions of CH4 an
d N2O during the growing seasons did not correlate with the age of the tree
stand. All sites were sources of N2O. The highest daily N2O emission durin
g the growing season, measured in the oldest site, was as high as 29 mg N2O
m(-2)d(-1). In general, organic agricultural soils are sinks for methane.
Here, the oldest site acted as a small sink for methane, whereas the two yo
ungest afforested organic soils were sources for methane with maximum emiss
ion rates (up to 154 mg m(-2)d(-1)) similar to those reported for minerogen
ous natural peatlands. Soil respiration rates decreased with the age of the
forest. The high soil respiration in the younger sites, probably resulted
from the high biomass production of herbs, could create soil anaerobiosis a
nd increase methane production. Our results show that afforestation of agri
cultural peat soils does not abruptly terminate the N2O emissions during th
e first two decades, and afforestation can even enhance methane emission fo
r a few years. The carbon accumulation in the developing tree stand can par
tly compensate the carbon loss from soil.