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Global and regional importance of the tropical peatland carbon pool

Global and regional importance of the tropical peatland carbon pool
Global and regional importance of the tropical peatland carbon pool
Accurate inventory of tropical peatland is important in order to (a) determine the magnitude of the carbon pool; (b) estimate the scale of transfers of peat-derived greenhouse gases to the atmosphere resulting from land use change; and (c) support carbon emissions reduction policies. We review available information on tropical peatland area and thickness and calculate peat volume and carbon content in order to determine their best estimates and ranges of variation. Our best estimate of tropical peatland area is 441 025 km2 (?11% of global peatland area) of which 247 778 km2 (56%) is in Southeast Asia. We estimate the volume of tropical peat to be 1758 Gm3 (?18–25% of global peat volume) with 1359 Gm3 in Southeast Asia (77% of all tropical peat). This new assessment reveals a larger tropical peatland carbon pool than previous estimates, with a best estimate of 88.6 Gt (range 81.7–91.9 Gt) equal to 15–19% of the global peat carbon pool. Of this, 68.5 Gt (77%) is in Southeast Asia, equal to 11–14% of global peat carbon. A single country, Indonesia, has the largest share of tropical peat carbon (57.4 Gt, 65%), followed by Malaysia (9.1 Gt, 10%). These data are used to provide revised estimates for Indonesian and Malaysian forest soil carbon pools of 77 and 15 Gt, respectively, and total forest carbon pools (biomass plus soil) of 97 and 19 Gt. Peat carbon contributes 60% to the total forest soil carbon pool in Malaysia and 74% in Indonesia. These results emphasize the prominent global and regional roles played by the tropical peat carbon pool and the importance of including this pool in national and regional assessments of terrestrial carbon stocks and the prediction of peat-derived greenhouse gas emissions.
carbon, carbon pool, peat, peat area, peat thickness, peat volume, tropical peatland
1354-1013
798-818
Page, Susan E.
947cbda0-cf98-466d-becc-339f5f6c6157
Rieley, John O.
79132280-f41e-463e-b5d6-48eaeddc18f0
Banks, Christopher J.
5d65ec1e-ed5f-48fc-9b05-3e46f24c35dc
Page, Susan E.
947cbda0-cf98-466d-becc-339f5f6c6157
Rieley, John O.
79132280-f41e-463e-b5d6-48eaeddc18f0
Banks, Christopher J.
5d65ec1e-ed5f-48fc-9b05-3e46f24c35dc

Page, Susan E., Rieley, John O. and Banks, Christopher J. (2011) Global and regional importance of the tropical peatland carbon pool. Global Change Biology, 17 (2), 798-818. (doi:10.1111/j.1365-2486.2010.02279.x).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Accurate inventory of tropical peatland is important in order to (a) determine the magnitude of the carbon pool; (b) estimate the scale of transfers of peat-derived greenhouse gases to the atmosphere resulting from land use change; and (c) support carbon emissions reduction policies. We review available information on tropical peatland area and thickness and calculate peat volume and carbon content in order to determine their best estimates and ranges of variation. Our best estimate of tropical peatland area is 441 025 km2 (?11% of global peatland area) of which 247 778 km2 (56%) is in Southeast Asia. We estimate the volume of tropical peat to be 1758 Gm3 (?18–25% of global peat volume) with 1359 Gm3 in Southeast Asia (77% of all tropical peat). This new assessment reveals a larger tropical peatland carbon pool than previous estimates, with a best estimate of 88.6 Gt (range 81.7–91.9 Gt) equal to 15–19% of the global peat carbon pool. Of this, 68.5 Gt (77%) is in Southeast Asia, equal to 11–14% of global peat carbon. A single country, Indonesia, has the largest share of tropical peat carbon (57.4 Gt, 65%), followed by Malaysia (9.1 Gt, 10%). These data are used to provide revised estimates for Indonesian and Malaysian forest soil carbon pools of 77 and 15 Gt, respectively, and total forest carbon pools (biomass plus soil) of 97 and 19 Gt. Peat carbon contributes 60% to the total forest soil carbon pool in Malaysia and 74% in Indonesia. These results emphasize the prominent global and regional roles played by the tropical peat carbon pool and the importance of including this pool in national and regional assessments of terrestrial carbon stocks and the prediction of peat-derived greenhouse gas emissions.

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More information

Published date: February 2011
Keywords: carbon, carbon pool, peat, peat area, peat thickness, peat volume, tropical peatland
Organisations: Marine Physics and Ocean Climate

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 208151
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/208151
ISSN: 1354-1013
PURE UUID: 0590889a-8836-4864-8047-bdb91e7ca0c4

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Date deposited: 16 Jan 2012 15:24
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 04:41

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Contributors

Author: Susan E. Page
Author: John O. Rieley
Author: Christopher J. Banks

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