Conservation slows down emission increase from a tropical peatland in Indonesia

Autor: Ankur R. Desai, Sofyan Kurnianto, Supiandi Sabiham, Dwi Astiani, Fahmuddin Agus, Dony Julius, Yuandanis Wahyu Salam, Chris D. Evans, Adibtya Asyhari, Chandra Shekhar Deshmukh, Yogi Suardiwerianto, Ari Putra Susanto, Susan Page, Nurholis Nurholis, Nardi Nardi, M. Hendrizal, Vincent Gauci
Rok vydání: 2021
Předmět:
Zdroj: Nature Geoscience. 14:484-490
ISSN: 1752-0908
1752-0894
DOI: 10.1038/s41561-021-00785-2
Popis: Tropical peatlands are threatened by climate change and land-use changes, but there remain substantial uncertainties about their present and future role in the global carbon cycle due to limited measurements. Here, we present measurements of carbon dioxide and methane emissions between mid-2017 and mid-2020 as well as nitrous oxide emissions between 2019 and 2020 at two contrasting sites at a coastal peatland in Sumatra, Indonesia. We find that greenhouse-gas emissions from intact peatland increased substantially due to an extreme drought caused by a positive Indian Ocean Dipole phase combined with El Nino. The emission in the degraded site was two times greater than that at the intact site. The smaller emission from the intact peatland suggests that protecting the remaining intact tropical peatlands from degradation offers important climate benefits, avoiding greenhouse-gas emissions of 24 ± 5 tCO2e ha−1 yr−1 (average ± standard deviation) at our study site in Indonesia. During a period of drought, an intact tropical peatland in Indonesia released half the amount of greenhouse gases as was released from a degraded site, according to a direct comparison of eddy covariance measurements at a pair of peatland sites in Sumatra.
Databáze: OpenAIRE