| About || Editorial Board || Volumes || Manuscripts || Book Reviews || Contact || Copyright |
Description  Released  Modified  File Size  Downloads 
.
What, when, who and how? A review of peatland research in Amazonia 20/04/2024 18:12 05/04/2024 18:47 2 MB 1077
Description for What, when, who and how? A review of peatland research in Amazonia

Volume 31 (2024) Article 03

What, when, who and how? A review of peatland research in Amazonia

by C. Malpica-Piñeros, A. Barthelmes, H. Joosten

Published online: 05.04.2024

Summary

Amazonia is believed to harbour the world’s most extensive tropical peatlands, storing significant amounts of carbon and having high value for biodiversity conservation, climate regulation and human welfare. However, a comprehensive assessment is hampered by fragmentary knowledge of the locations of peat-covered areas and this, in turn, prevents their protection and restoration in the face of ongoing anthropogenic destruction. The study reported here reviewed research activities on peatlands in Amazonia, which started with ecological studies in the 1950s. We found a broad and significant thematic increase since 2009, with growing focus first on carbon accumulation and greenhouse gas fluxes then, after 2017, on degradation and conservation, along with a spatial imbalance in favour of the Peruvian lowlands. Hitherto, very little scientific attention has been directed towards the peatlands of western Brazil, the Bolivian lowlands and the Guianas. Most research in Amazonia has been conducted by international institutions with, in recent times, increasing contributions from local institutes and research groups. Nevertheless, research on Amazonian peatlands is still in its early stages, and several scientific questions remain unanswered. Advancing the knowledge base with respect to various scientific disciplines (e.g., ecology, biology, geography, social sciences and economics) is, therefore, essential for understanding how and where peatlands developed, how they are used, which ecosystem services they provide, how climate change will affect them and, finally, what would be the most appropriate conservation, restoration and sustainable use strategies for safeguarding the wellbeing of both peatlands and people.

Citation

Malpica-Piñeros, C., Barthelmes, A., Joosten H. (2024) What, when, who and how? A review of peatland research in Amazonia. Mires and Peat, 31, 03, 26pp. (Online: http://www.mires-and-peat.net/pages/volumes/map31/map3103.php); doi: 10.19189/MaP.2023.OMB.Sc.2115055

Reviewers

IMCG and IPS acknowledge the work of the reviewers.

 
[PREVIOUS_PAGE_LINK]
[OF]
[NEXT_PAGE_LINK]

www.mires-and-peat.net
Key title: Mires and Peat
data protection | imprint

ISSN 1819-754X
Abbreviated key title: Mires Peat

Drucken
© 2025 Mires and Peat