Global peatlands store more carbon than is naturally present in the atmosphere1,2. However, many peatlands are under pressure from drainage-based agriculture, plantation development and fire, with the equivalent of around 3 per cent of all anthropogenic greenhouse gases emitted from drained peatland3,4,5. Efforts to curb such emissions are intensifying through the conservation of undrained peatlands and re-wetting of drained systems6. Here we report eddy covariance data for carbon dioxide from 16 locations and static chamber measurements for methane from 41 locations in the UK and Ireland. We combine these with published data from sites across all major peatland biomes. We find that the mean annual effective water table depth (WTDe; that is...
A peatland is a type of ecosystem where carbon (C) along with nitrogen and several other elements ha...
International audienceThe function of peatlands as a large carbon (C) reservoir results from the net...
Peatlands occupy a relatively small fraction of the Earth’s land area, but they are a globally impor...
Global peatlands store more carbon than is naturally present in the atmosphere.However, many peatlan...
Natural peatland are efficient ecosystems in storing carbon and serve as a net sink of atmospheric C...
On a global scale, the release of greenhouse gases (GHG) from peatland drainage and cultivation are ...
Upland peat is the world's largest store of soil carbon and one of the most climatically sensitive. ...
International audienceThe climate impact of water-table drawdown in peatlands is unclear as carbon d...
Since the last deglaciation, 300-500 Pg carbon have accumulated in northern peatlands (346 mill. ha)...
Peatland disturbance through drainage threatens to liberate large amounts of C stocks by increasing ...
Peatlands cover approximately 2-3% of the world’s land area yet represent approximately a third of t...
Peatland restoration seeks to re-establish a number of ecosystem services, with carbon (C) sequestra...
Peatlands store disproportionately large amounts of soil carbon relative to other terrestrial ecosys...
A peatland is a type of ecosystem where carbon (C) along with nitrogen and several other elements ha...
International audienceThe function of peatlands as a large carbon (C) reservoir results from the net...
Peatlands occupy a relatively small fraction of the Earth’s land area, but they are a globally impor...
Global peatlands store more carbon than is naturally present in the atmosphere.However, many peatlan...
Natural peatland are efficient ecosystems in storing carbon and serve as a net sink of atmospheric C...
On a global scale, the release of greenhouse gases (GHG) from peatland drainage and cultivation are ...
Upland peat is the world's largest store of soil carbon and one of the most climatically sensitive. ...
International audienceThe climate impact of water-table drawdown in peatlands is unclear as carbon d...
Since the last deglaciation, 300-500 Pg carbon have accumulated in northern peatlands (346 mill. ha)...
Peatland disturbance through drainage threatens to liberate large amounts of C stocks by increasing ...
Peatlands cover approximately 2-3% of the world’s land area yet represent approximately a third of t...
Peatland restoration seeks to re-establish a number of ecosystem services, with carbon (C) sequestra...
Peatlands store disproportionately large amounts of soil carbon relative to other terrestrial ecosys...
A peatland is a type of ecosystem where carbon (C) along with nitrogen and several other elements ha...
International audienceThe function of peatlands as a large carbon (C) reservoir results from the net...
Peatlands occupy a relatively small fraction of the Earth’s land area, but they are a globally impor...