Replication Data for: Degradation increases peat greenhouse gas emissions in undrained tropical peat swamp forests

Tropical peat swamp degradation can modify net peat greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions even without drainage. However, current Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) guidelines do not provide default emission factors (EF) for anthropogenically-degraded undrained organic soils. We reviewed published field measurements of peat GHG fluxes in undrained undegraded and degraded peat swamp forests in Southeast Asia (SEA) and Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC). Degradation without drainage shifted the peat from a net CO2 sink to a source in both SEA (-2.9±1.8 to 4.1±2.0 Mg CO2-C ha-1 yr-1) and LAC (-4.3±1.8 to 1.4±2.2 Mg CO2-C ha-1 yr-1). It raised peat CH4 emissions (kg C ha-1 yr-1) in SEA (22.1±13.6 to 32.7±7.8) but decreased them in LAC (218.3±54.2 to 165.0±4.5). Degradation increased peat N2O emissions (kg N ha-1 yr-1) in SEA forests (0.9±0.5 to 4.8±2.3) (limited N2O data). It shifted peat from a net GHG sink to a source in SEA (-7.9±6.9 to 20.7±7.4 Mg CO2-equivalent ha-1 yr-1) and increased peat GHG emissions in LAC (9.8±9.0 to 24.3±8.2 Mg CO2-equivalent ha-1 yr-1). The large observed increase in net peat GHG emissions in undrained degraded forests compared to undegraded conditions calls for their inclusion as a new class in the IPCC guidelines. As current default IPCC EF for tropical organic soils are based only on data collected in SEA ombrotrophic peatlands, expanded geographic representation and refinement of peat GHG EF by nutrient status are also needed.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Swails, E.
Other Authors: Erlita, Sufiet
Format: other biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR)
Subjects:Climate Change, Energy and low carbon development (CCE), land use change, peatlands, decomposition, hydrology, water table,
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.17528/CIFOR/DATA.00291
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spelling dat-cifor-10.17528CIFORDATA.002912024-01-05T02:00:06ZReplication Data for: Degradation increases peat greenhouse gas emissions in undrained tropical peat swamp forestshttps://doi.org/10.17528/CIFOR/DATA.00291Swails, E.Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR)Tropical peat swamp degradation can modify net peat greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions even without drainage. However, current Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) guidelines do not provide default emission factors (EF) for anthropogenically-degraded undrained organic soils. We reviewed published field measurements of peat GHG fluxes in undrained undegraded and degraded peat swamp forests in Southeast Asia (SEA) and Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC). Degradation without drainage shifted the peat from a net CO2 sink to a source in both SEA (-2.9±1.8 to 4.1±2.0 Mg CO2-C ha-1 yr-1) and LAC (-4.3±1.8 to 1.4±2.2 Mg CO2-C ha-1 yr-1). It raised peat CH4 emissions (kg C ha-1 yr-1) in SEA (22.1±13.6 to 32.7±7.8) but decreased them in LAC (218.3±54.2 to 165.0±4.5). Degradation increased peat N2O emissions (kg N ha-1 yr-1) in SEA forests (0.9±0.5 to 4.8±2.3) (limited N2O data). It shifted peat from a net GHG sink to a source in SEA (-7.9±6.9 to 20.7±7.4 Mg CO2-equivalent ha-1 yr-1) and increased peat GHG emissions in LAC (9.8±9.0 to 24.3±8.2 Mg CO2-equivalent ha-1 yr-1). The large observed increase in net peat GHG emissions in undrained degraded forests compared to undegraded conditions calls for their inclusion as a new class in the IPCC guidelines. As current default IPCC EF for tropical organic soils are based only on data collected in SEA ombrotrophic peatlands, expanded geographic representation and refinement of peat GHG EF by nutrient status are also needed.Climate Change, Energy and low carbon development (CCE)land use changepeatlandsdecompositionhydrologywater tableEnglishErlita, Sufietother
institution CIFOR
collection Dataverse
country Indonesia
countrycode ID
component Datos de investigación
access En linea
En linea
databasecode dat-cifor
tag biblioteca
region Asia del Sureste
libraryname Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR)
language English
topic Climate Change, Energy and low carbon development (CCE)
land use change
peatlands
decomposition
hydrology
water table
Climate Change, Energy and low carbon development (CCE)
land use change
peatlands
decomposition
hydrology
water table
spellingShingle Climate Change, Energy and low carbon development (CCE)
land use change
peatlands
decomposition
hydrology
water table
Climate Change, Energy and low carbon development (CCE)
land use change
peatlands
decomposition
hydrology
water table
Swails, E.
Replication Data for: Degradation increases peat greenhouse gas emissions in undrained tropical peat swamp forests
description Tropical peat swamp degradation can modify net peat greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions even without drainage. However, current Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) guidelines do not provide default emission factors (EF) for anthropogenically-degraded undrained organic soils. We reviewed published field measurements of peat GHG fluxes in undrained undegraded and degraded peat swamp forests in Southeast Asia (SEA) and Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC). Degradation without drainage shifted the peat from a net CO2 sink to a source in both SEA (-2.9±1.8 to 4.1±2.0 Mg CO2-C ha-1 yr-1) and LAC (-4.3±1.8 to 1.4±2.2 Mg CO2-C ha-1 yr-1). It raised peat CH4 emissions (kg C ha-1 yr-1) in SEA (22.1±13.6 to 32.7±7.8) but decreased them in LAC (218.3±54.2 to 165.0±4.5). Degradation increased peat N2O emissions (kg N ha-1 yr-1) in SEA forests (0.9±0.5 to 4.8±2.3) (limited N2O data). It shifted peat from a net GHG sink to a source in SEA (-7.9±6.9 to 20.7±7.4 Mg CO2-equivalent ha-1 yr-1) and increased peat GHG emissions in LAC (9.8±9.0 to 24.3±8.2 Mg CO2-equivalent ha-1 yr-1). The large observed increase in net peat GHG emissions in undrained degraded forests compared to undegraded conditions calls for their inclusion as a new class in the IPCC guidelines. As current default IPCC EF for tropical organic soils are based only on data collected in SEA ombrotrophic peatlands, expanded geographic representation and refinement of peat GHG EF by nutrient status are also needed.
author2 Erlita, Sufiet
author_facet Erlita, Sufiet
Swails, E.
format other
topic_facet Climate Change, Energy and low carbon development (CCE)
land use change
peatlands
decomposition
hydrology
water table
author Swails, E.
author_sort Swails, E.
title Replication Data for: Degradation increases peat greenhouse gas emissions in undrained tropical peat swamp forests
title_short Replication Data for: Degradation increases peat greenhouse gas emissions in undrained tropical peat swamp forests
title_full Replication Data for: Degradation increases peat greenhouse gas emissions in undrained tropical peat swamp forests
title_fullStr Replication Data for: Degradation increases peat greenhouse gas emissions in undrained tropical peat swamp forests
title_full_unstemmed Replication Data for: Degradation increases peat greenhouse gas emissions in undrained tropical peat swamp forests
title_sort replication data for: degradation increases peat greenhouse gas emissions in undrained tropical peat swamp forests
publisher Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR)
url https://doi.org/10.17528/CIFOR/DATA.00291
work_keys_str_mv AT swailse replicationdatafordegradationincreasespeatgreenhousegasemissionsinundrainedtropicalpeatswampforests
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