Risks to carbon storage from land-use change revealed by peat thickness maps of Peru

被引:0
|
作者
Adam Hastie
Eurídice N. Honorio Coronado
José Reyna
Edward T. A. Mitchard
Christine M. Åkesson
Timothy R. Baker
Lydia E. S. Cole
César. J. Córdova Oroche
Greta Dargie
Nállarett Dávila
Elsa Carla De Grandi
Jhon Del Águila
Dennis Del Castillo Torres
Ricardo De La Cruz Paiva
Frederick C. Draper
Gerardo Flores
Julio Grández
Kristell Hergoualc’h
J. Ethan Householder
John P. Janovec
Outi Lähteenoja
David Reyna
Pedro Rodríguez-Veiga
Katherine H. Roucoux
Mathias Tobler
Charlotte E. Wheeler
Mathew Williams
Ian T. Lawson
机构
[1] University of Edinburgh,School of GeoSciences
[2] University of St Andrews,School of Geography and Sustainable Development
[3] Instituto de Investigaciones de la Amazonía Peruana (IIAP),School of Geography
[4] University of Leeds,Center for Global Discovery and Conservation Science
[5] Servicio Nacional Forestal y de Fauna Silvestre,Department of Geography and Planning
[6] Arizona State University,Wetland Ecology, Institute for Geography and Geoecology
[7] University of Liverpool,Sam Houston State University Natural History Museum
[8] Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR),Centre for Landscape and Climate Research (CLCR), School of Geography, Geology and Environment
[9] Karlsruhe Institute for Technology,National Centre for Earth Observation
[10] Sam Houston State University,San Diego Zoo Global
[11] University of Leicester,NCEO
[12] University of Leicester,undefined
[13] Institute for Conservation Research,undefined
[14] University of Edinburgh,undefined
来源
Nature Geoscience | 2022年 / 15卷
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Tropical peatlands are among the most carbon-dense ecosystems but land-use change has led to the loss of large peatland areas, associated with substantial greenhouse gas emissions. To design effective conservation and restoration policies, maps of the location and carbon storage of tropical peatlands are vital. This is especially so in countries such as Peru where the distribution of its large, hydrologically intact peatlands is poorly known. Here field and remote sensing data support the model development of peatland extent and thickness for lowland Peruvian Amazonia. We estimate a peatland area of 62,714 km2 (5th and 95th confidence interval percentiles of 58,325 and 67,102 km2, respectively) and carbon stock of 5.4 (2.6–10.6) PgC, a value approaching the entire above-ground carbon stock of Peru but contained within just 5% of its land area. Combining the map of peatland extent with national land-cover data we reveal small but growing areas of deforestation and associated CO2 emissions from peat decomposition due to conversion to mining, urban areas and agriculture. The emissions from peatland areas classified as forest in 2000 represent 1–4% of Peruvian CO2 forest emissions between 2000 and 2016. We suggest that bespoke monitoring, protection and sustainable management of tropical peatlands are required to avoid further degradation and CO2 emissions.
引用
收藏
页码:369 / 374
页数:5
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [11] LAND-USE AND CARBON STORAGE IN GEORGIA FORESTS
    SHARPE, DM
    JOHNSON, WC
    JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, 1981, 12 (03) : 221 - 233
  • [12] Sources and sinks of carbon from land-use change in China
    Houghton, RA
    Hackler, JL
    GLOBAL BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES, 2003, 17 (02)
  • [13] Carbon density and anthropogenic land-use influences on net land-use change emissions
    Smith, S. J.
    Rothwell, A.
    BIOGEOSCIENCES, 2013, 10 (10) : 6323 - 6337
  • [14] LAND-USE CHANGE AND THE CARBON-CYCLE
    HOUGHTON, RA
    GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 1995, 1 (04) : 275 - 287
  • [15] Annual emissions of carbon from land use, land-use change, and forestry from 1850 to 2020
    Houghton, Richard A.
    Castanho, Andrea
    EARTH SYSTEM SCIENCE DATA, 2023, 15 (05) : 2025 - 2054
  • [16] Mechanisms for changes in soil carbon storage with pasture to Pinus radiata land-use change
    Halliday, JC
    Tate, KR
    McMurtrie, RE
    Scott, NA
    GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2003, 9 (09) : 1294 - 1308
  • [17] Impacts of Land-Use Change, Slope, and Erosion on Soil Organic Carbon Retention and Storage
    Olson, Kenneth R.
    Gennadiyev, Alexander N.
    Zhidkin, Andrey P.
    Markelov, Maxim V.
    SOIL SCIENCE, 2012, 177 (04) : 269 - 278
  • [18] REFINING ESTIMATES OF CARBON RELEASED FROM TROPICAL LAND-USE CHANGE
    HALL, CAS
    UHLIG, J
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FOREST RESEARCH-REVUE CANADIENNE DE RECHERCHE FORESTIERE, 1991, 21 (01): : 118 - 131
  • [19] Sensitivity of Carbon Emission Estimates from Indirect Land-Use Change
    Dumortier, Jerome
    Hayes, Dermot J.
    Carriquiry, Miguel
    Dong, Fengxia
    Du, Xiaodong
    Elobeid, Amani
    Fabiosa, Jacinto F.
    Tokgoz, Simla
    APPLIED ECONOMIC PERSPECTIVES AND POLICY, 2011, 33 (03) : 428 - 448
  • [20] China's carbon sinks from land-use change underestimated
    Zhu, Yakun
    Xia, Xiaosheng
    Canadell, Josep G.
    Piao, Shilong
    Lu, Xinqing
    Mishra, Umakant
    Wang, Xuhui
    Yuan, Wenping
    Qin, Zhangcai
    NATURE CLIMATE CHANGE, 2025, : 428 - 435