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The essential carbon service provided by northern peatlands

Journal

FRONTIERS IN ECOLOGY AND THE ENVIRONMENT
Volume 20, Issue 4, Pages 222-230

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/fee.2437

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Metcalf Foundation
  2. Weston Family Foundation
  3. Campus Alberta Innovation Program through the University of Alberta
  4. Chisholm Thomson Family Foundation

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Northern peatlands have cooled the global climate by accumulating large quantities of soil carbon over thousands of years, making them critical for mitigating climate warming. Despite their importance, these peatlands in Canada and globally are facing threats from land-use change and disturbances, highlighting the need for targeted policies to strengthen their management. Insufficient policy safeguards and limited quantification and reporting of peatland greenhouse-gas emissions and removals increase the vulnerability of these important ecosystems.
Northern peatlands have cooled the global climate by accumulating large quantities of soil carbon (C) over thousands of years. Maintaining the C sink function of these peatlands and their immense long-term soil C stores is critical for achieving net-zero global carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions by 2050 to mitigate climate warming. One-quarter of the world's northern peatlands are in Canada, with these mostly intact ecosystems providing a global C service that is increasingly recognized as a critical part of nature-based solutions to combat climate change. However, land-use change and other disturbances threaten these globally important stores of irrecoverable C (that is, soil C lost to disturbance that will take centuries to recover). Inadequate policy safeguards to avoid conversion and degradation, and the limited quantification and reporting of peatland greenhouse-gas emissions and removals, increase the vulnerability of these peatlands. Targeted policies from local to global scales will be needed for improved decision making and incentivizing long-term C management of northern peatlands.

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