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What Are Peatlands? |
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by Seojin Lee | 29-03-2022 14:20 0 |
What exactly is a peatland? A peatland is a common type of natural-occurring environmental area. More specifically, it is a wetland composed of peat, which is partially decomposed plant material caused by the water-logged conditions of the area. When we refer to something as a ¡°peatland,¡± we usually refer to the general area where peat is formed along with the wetland habitat that has developed in that area. Peatlands are fairly common globally as they exist on every continent and ¡°cover 4.23 million km^2, which corresponds to 2.84% of the Earth¡¯s terrestrial surface¡± (3). An important fact to note about peatlands is that they store large amounts of carbon; in fact, they ¡°store and sequester more carbon than any other type of terrestrial ecosystem¡± (3). How exactly are peatlands related to environmental issues? Peatlands, most of the time, are friendly towards the environment in several ways. When left untouched, peatlands provide several benefits such as a ¡°net cooling effect on climate, [the reduction of] flood risk, and [the support of] biodiversity¡± (1). The reason why they provide a cooling effect is that the plants undergo photosynthesis and absorb harmful carbon dioxide from the atmosphere but do not release carbon back into the atmosphere as they are prevented from being fully decomposed, effectively keeping the carbon stored inside the partially decayed plants. However, peatlands have also been a major source of greenhouse gas emissions, due to them being drained as a result of human exploitation. Annually, ¡°Emissions from drained peatlands are estimated at 1.9 gigatonnes of CO2¡± and are ¡°equivalent to 5% of global anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions¡± (2). Additionally, the exploitation of peatlands results in water pollution and biodiversity loss; an example is the Bornean orang-utan population that has been marked as critically endangered after their peatland habitat had been deprived. What can countries do? The International Union for Conservation of Nature suggests several ideas to preserve peatlands and prevent them from continuing to act as an environmental threat. First, they urge countries and governments to set clear goals for the protection of peatlands and include the protection of peatlands in their environment-protecting plans. Second, they recommend clear and conservation-friendly definitions of peatlands to be agreed upon across countries. Third, they state that ¡°Public and private finance must be [mobilized] to secure peatlands and provide green jobs¡± (2). Finally, they call for peatland exploitation to come to a complete halt until the proper laws could be set in order to ¡°ensure [that] peatlands are managed sustainably¡± (2). Sources:
Images: 1. https://peatlands.org/peatlands/what-are-peatlands/ 2. https://blogs.egu.eu/geolog/tag/peatlands/
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4 Comments
This article is very informative! Thank you for such useful information!
Posted 02-08-2022 06:41
Hello Seojin, this is your mentor Chelwoon.
Peat is actually a type of coal that is not old enough to be completely carbonized. The process of formation of peat is almost the same as coal. However peat is distinguished in general from coal as it is produced by decomposition on the surface. As a result of the different amount of time they take to form, peat contains a lower amount of carbon than coal does.
Peatlands provide several benefits that you have mentioned, if they are well preserved. This is the reason why we have to keep peatlands safe even though it is hard to prohibit the exploitation of coal.
Thank you for the article!
Regards,
Chelwoon
Posted 01-04-2022 06:23
Hello Seojin, this is your mentor Joon.
Peatland provides different benefits to our nature. It cools earth's surface, captures methane gas, and so much beneficial aspects exist. I got the chance to explore the specific type of peatland called 'bog'. Bog is a peatland, which water does not flow and becomes stagnated. The most famous bog is located near Ireland and it is an archaeological spot as it preserves data from early ages. The oldest bog body found could trace back to 5000 years ago. We should and must preserve peatlands providing uncountable benefits.
Well read your article, and let's keep up!
Best,
Joon
Posted 31-03-2022 13:38
Hello Seojin,
Greetings from Nepal
Thank you for writing about Peatland. It is very informative. Keep Writing.
Regards,
Sagar
Posted 29-03-2022 15:49