The Scotsman

Peatlands ability to soak up CO2 will play key part in climate change battle

- By ILONA AMOS

Peatlands in Scotland and other cold climes will absorb increasing amounts of carbon dioxide over the coming decades as the planet warms due to climate change, according to new internatio­nal research.

However, absorption rates will slow after peaking around the end of the century if global temperatur­es get too hot.

Academics say this “negative feedback” – when climate change causes effects that slow further warming – will increase over the coming decades but will decline after 2100 if warming continues.

Peatlands are a vital sink for carbon, currently storing more than all the world’s vegetation. The latest analysis suggests they will store even more carbon in the future than was previously believed.

In environmen­ts such as forests, carbon from dead plants decomposes and is released into the atmosphere. In peatlands, water slows this process and locks in carbon.

Most peatlands are in cold climatesin­placessuch­assiberia and Canada, where a rise in temperatur­es would lengthen the growing season for plants – meaning more plant matter will fall into peat bogs.

But this initial increase in carbon storage, estimated to be about 5 per cent, will be offset by reduced capacity in tropical peat bogs in areas like Borneo and the Amazon.

“Plants living in cold-climate peatlands have it tough for most of the year, but rising

0 Peatlands are a vital sink for carbon as the water slows down its release into the atmosphere

global temperatur­es will give them a longer growing season,” said study leader Dr Angela Gallego-sala, of the University of Exeter.

“Decomposit­ion in peatlands will speed up as the climate warms, meaning more carbon and methane released, but the overall effect in these high-latitude regions will be increased storage of carbon.

“However, as warming continues, tropical peatlands will store less carbon because decomposit­ion will speed up

but higher temperatur­es in these already warm regions will not boost plant growth.”

Professor Sue Page, of the University of Leicester, says thestudyhi­ghlightsth­eimportanc­e of protecting peatlands.

“Restoratio­n efforts such as rewetting drained and degraded peatlands can restore the waterlogge­d conditions needed to prevent the release of peat carbon. These efforts need to be intensifie­d if we are to avoid accelerati­ng peatland Co2emissio­nsintothef­uture.”

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