Javascript must be enabled to continue!
A review of greenhouse gas emissions and removals from Irish peatlands
View through CrossRef
Since peatlands cover around 20 % of the land area in the Republic of Ireland, their management is of particular significance in reducing national greenhouse gases (GHG) emissions. We reviewed peatland carbon (C) flux studies within Ireland, extracting data for carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide fluxes, as well as fluvial losses and here propose preliminary country-specific emission factors (EFs) for various peatland land uses and management practices. Using our derived EFs and latest areal estimates, national emissions from peatlands (excluding horticulture and combustion) amount to 1.9 Mt C y-¹ (± 0.4–3.4 Mt C y-¹), with more than half of all peatland GHG emissions coming from grasslands on organic soils and over one-third from domestic extraction drained peatlands. Our analyses suggest that peatland management through rewetting and restoration has the potential to substantially reduce emissions from drained peatlands, and this article attempts to quantify this reduction. This is critically important given the large areas of degraded peatlands that have been earmarked for rewetting in the next decade.
Stiftung Moorbibliothek
Title: A review of greenhouse gas emissions and removals from Irish peatlands
Description:
Since peatlands cover around 20 % of the land area in the Republic of Ireland, their management is of particular significance in reducing national greenhouse gases (GHG) emissions.
We reviewed peatland carbon (C) flux studies within Ireland, extracting data for carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide fluxes, as well as fluvial losses and here propose preliminary country-specific emission factors (EFs) for various peatland land uses and management practices.
Using our derived EFs and latest areal estimates, national emissions from peatlands (excluding horticulture and combustion) amount to 1.
9 Mt C y-¹ (± 0.
4–3.
4 Mt C y-¹), with more than half of all peatland GHG emissions coming from grasslands on organic soils and over one-third from domestic extraction drained peatlands.
Our analyses suggest that peatland management through rewetting and restoration has the potential to substantially reduce emissions from drained peatlands, and this article attempts to quantify this reduction.
This is critically important given the large areas of degraded peatlands that have been earmarked for rewetting in the next decade.
Related Results
Irish Literature and the Union with Britain, 1801–1921
Irish Literature and the Union with Britain, 1801–1921
Studies of Romantic and Victorian literary culture often sideline Irish writing—not always out of Anglocentric prejudice, but also because Irish literature in those periods was fre...
Drivers of CH4 flux quantity and variability in re-wetted European peatlands
Drivers of CH4 flux quantity and variability in re-wetted European peatlands
Peatlands cover ~3% of the global land surface, yet they store 21 – 30% of the world’s soil organic carbon. Large areas of pristine peatland have been drained t...
Urban Methane Emissions in Auckland, New Zealand
Urban Methane Emissions in Auckland, New Zealand
<p><b>Using a mobile survey sampling technique, my research investigates the spatial distribution of urban methane emissions in Auckland, New Zealand. The mobile survey...
Evaluating the Science to Inform the Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans Midcourse Report
Evaluating the Science to Inform the Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans Midcourse Report
Abstract
The Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans (Guidelines) advises older adults to be as active as possible. Yet, despite the well documented benefits of physical a...
CLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION STRATEGIES IN THE OIL & GAS SECTOR: A REVIEW OF PRACTICES AND IMPACT
CLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION STRATEGIES IN THE OIL & GAS SECTOR: A REVIEW OF PRACTICES AND IMPACT
Climate change mitigation has become a pressing global challenge, with the oil and gas sector being a significant contributor to greenhouse gas emissions. This review examines clim...
Seasonal and diurnal patterns in Greenhouse Gas fluxes from re-wetted European peatlands
Seasonal and diurnal patterns in Greenhouse Gas fluxes from re-wetted European peatlands
Peatlands represent 2.5% of all agricultural land in the EU, yet they account for ~ 25% of agricultural greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, and ~ 5% of total EU-wide GHG emissions. Sev...
Cores for concern: Peatland carbon dynamics in a changing climate; a multidisciplinary approach.
Cores for concern: Peatland carbon dynamics in a changing climate; a multidisciplinary approach.
<p>The effects of 21<sup>st</sup> century climate change are projected to be most severe in the northern hemisphere, where the majority of...
Decomposition in Drained Coastal Peatlands
Decomposition in Drained Coastal Peatlands
Peatlands, while covering only about 3% of the Earth’s surface, store nearly a third of global soil carbon. This carbon accumulated under waterlogged, oxygen-poor conditions that s...

