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Warmer climate to dry up peatlands: study

HONG KONG
Mon Oct 13, 2008 11:00am EDT
Tree saplings are seen growing near river banks as part of a project to rehabilitate burnt and degraded peatlands in the Central Kalimantan ex-Mega Rice project May 1 2007. REUTERS/Hardi Baktiantoro

HONG KONG (Reuters) - Warmer temperatures in the years ahead will dry up peatlands, release more carbon dioxide into the world's atmosphere and aggravate global warming, a study in Japan has found.

Green Business  |  Russia

Peat is the accumulation of partially decayed vegetation in very wet places and it covers about two percent of global land mass. Peatlands store large amounts of carbon owing to the low rates of carbon breakdown in cold, waterlogged soils.

Using computer modeling, scientists in Japan found that peatlands -- concentrated in high latitude places like Canada, Russia and Alaska -- look set to get dryer with increasingly warmer global temperatures.

A warming of four degrees Celsius causes a 40 percent carbon loss from shallow peat and 86 percent carbon loss from deep peat, according to the study, published in the latest issue of Nature Geoscience.

"This will cause carbon loss from the soil which means an increase in carbon dioxide concentration in the atmosphere, which will further worsen global warming," said Takeshi Ise from the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology.

"So we have to do something to mitigate global warming," he told Reuters by telephone.

Global warming is caused by an increase in atmospheric greenhouse gases such as water vapour, carbon dioxide, methane and ozone. The increase in carbon dioxide is mostly blamed on human activities such as burning of coal, oil and gas.

(Reporting by Tan Ee Lyn; Editing by Jerry Norton)



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