2. Global Distribution of Peatlands
Approximately 4 million km2
175 countries from tropics to poles
3% of the world’s land area
3. UK Distribution of Peatlands
Peatlands occur in a number of
different forms in the UK: fens,
wet woodland and bogs
92% of the peatland in the UK
occurs as blanket and raised
bogs
The UK has about 13% of the
world’s blanket bog
4. Carbon storage & sink
Peatlands cover just 3% of the world’s land surface but store more than
30% of the total global soil carbon
A loss of just 1.6% of the global peat store equates to the total annual
global anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions
In the UK peatlands store 3 200 million tonnes of carbon, 20 times than
that of UK forests
Semi-natural, intact bogs may remove 30-70 tonnes of carbon per km2 per
year
A loss of just 5% of the UK peat store equates to the total annual UK
anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions
5. Biodiversity
Largest area of semi-natural habitat in the UK containing 16 NVC plant
communities
One of the most ancient and unique habitats in Europe dating back
thousands of years (designated as SAC)
Supports a unique, rare and threatened range of specialised species
adapted to waterlogged, nutrient-poor conditions such as sundews and
Sphagnum
Internationally important bird assemblages such as golden plover, dunlin,
merlin & hen harrier (designated as SPA)
6. History
Preserved pollen and partially decomposed plant remains enables
reconstruction of vegetation and land management history.
Record of past atmospheric pollution levels
Record of past events – eg volcanic eruptions
Archaeological artefacts
7. Economy
As major tourist attractions peatland bring the tourist pound into remote
areas supporting accommodation providers and local communites
Management of peatlands for grouse (or deer stalking in Scotland)
provides employment opportunities for keepers and other sporting
managers
Peatlands are an integral part of the extensive sheep farming systems of
the UK uplands
In some areas of the UK peat is still exploited as a fuel
source
8. Current state of peatlands
Less than 20% of blanket bog in UK is in a natural or near-natural
condition
Majority of UK peatlands are no longer peat forming
16% severely eroded, 10% afforested, 11% affected by past peat-cutting,
40% modified or destroyed by conversion to agriculture
Now emitting 3.7million tonnes of CO2 equivalents per year > average
annual emissions of Leeds, Edinburgh and Cardiff.
Only 58% of internationally designated blanket bog is in favourable
condition. Of the rest only 15% is recovering
Over last 30 years amount of dissolved organic carbon (brown colour) in
water draining peatlands has doubled which has to be taken out by water
companies
9. Key damaging drivers
Large areas drained with ditches (grips) through agricultural subsidies.
No longer funded but still flowing and eroding
10% of UK peatlands afforested. Generally requires drainage, cultivation
and fertilisation which causes peat to crack, shrink and oxidise
Heavy grazing changes the vegetation converting from specialists to
grass dominated peatlands which begin to erode and stop peat forming.
Fire. Wildfire and poorly-managed burns on grouse moors damages
Sphagnum and leads to conversion to heather and grasses. Dessicated
peatlands are drier and more prone to fire – a vicious circle
10. Partnership funded by:
Yorkshire Wildlife Trust
Yorkshire Dales NPA
North York Moors NPA
Environment Agency
Natural England
Yorkshire Water
National Trust
Other Partners:
Yorkshire Dales rivers Trust
Nidderdale AONB
Pennine Prospects
Moorland Association
National Gamekeepers Association
National Farmers Union
11.
12. Objectives
•Restore 35,000 (50%) of peatland by restoring 3401km (45%) of
grip/gully and re-vegetating 169ha (50%) of bare peat by March 2017
• Establish long-term sites for research into the benefits of peatland
restoration to ecosystem services by March 2013
•To use and promote best practice in all applied restoration techniques
•To raise awareness and promote the multitude of benefits that peatland
restoration can provide
21. Gully/hag reprofiling
All gullies but especially larger ones that can’t be blocked are re-profiled and
then re-vegetated to remove source of continued erosion
22. Re-vegetating bare peat
Bare peat needs treating in several ways to get a vegetation cover to
establish
pH levels often too low for vegetation (even Sphagnum)
Wind, water and frost heave in exposed areas mean surface is continually
mobile so vegetation cannot get a hold
Vulnerable to dessiccation in dry periods
23. Cut heather brash
Transport brash to site
Spread brash to stabilise surface
Create stable root mat
Spread lime & fertiliser to support
growth for 3 yrs
3 yrs on all being well
Establish Sphagnum & other
peat formers
24. Results so far
Achievement by December 2011 Quantity
Area of land surveyed 16,542ha (48%)
Area under restoration 3283ha (10%)
Length of grips blocked 334km (13%)
Length of eroding gullies re-vegetated 40km (5%)
Area of bare peat re-vegetated 17ha (10%)
Number of peat dams installed in grips 33,000
Number of timber sediment traps installed in larger grips and 300
gullies
Number of peat depth records 20,000
Number of volunteers involved 40
27. Water quality
Blocking reduces fine particulate organic matter, suspended solids and
bed sediment leading to change back to Ephemeroptera, Plecoptera,
Trichoptera from Diptera.
Peatlands cover approximately 4million km2 3% of the world’s land area Stretching across 175 countries from the tropics to the poles
UK has 9-15% of Europe’s peatlands UK peatlands form 33% of the UK’s soils. The majority of UK peatlands are concentrated in Scotland and northern England Red/dark brown show the deeper peatland areas with mainly blanket and raised bogs Green shows the degraded shallow peaty soils again mainly in the uplands The light brown areas in East Anglia and other agricultural lowlands show wasted or cultivated peat. The peatlands in the southeast are fens
The Part A survey Is desk based Map Grips Gullies Bare peat HER
For the part be survey we draw transects across the site again ensuring we get the best coverage