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Mitigating wildfire carbon loss in managed...
Journal article

Mitigating wildfire carbon loss in managed northern peatlands through restoration

Abstract

Northern peatlands can emit large amounts of carbon and harmful smoke pollution during a wildfire. Of particular concern are drained and mined peatlands, where management practices destabilize an array of ecohydrological feedbacks, moss traits and peat properties that moderate water and carbon losses in natural peatlands. Our results demonstrate that drained and mined peatlands in Canada and northern Europe can experience catastrophic deep burns (>200 t C ha−1 emitted) under current weather conditions. Furthermore, climate change will cause greater water losses in these peatlands and subject even deeper peat layers to wildfire combustion. However, the rewetting of drained peatlands and the restoration of mined peatlands can effectively lower the risk of these deep burns, especially if a new peat moss layer successfully establishes and raises peat moisture content. We argue that restoration efforts are a necessary measure to mitigate the risk of carbon loss in managed peatlands under climate change.

Authors

Granath G; Moore PA; Lukenbach MC; Waddington JM

Journal

Scientific Reports, Vol. 6, No. 1,

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

June 27, 2016

DOI

10.1038/srep28498

ISSN

2045-2322

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