Back to Search Start Over

Towards a microbial process-based understanding of the resilience of peatland ecosystem service provisioning – A research agenda

Authors :
ROWSON, JAMES
Ritson, Jonathan
Alderson, Danielle
Robinson , Clare
Burkitt, Alexandra
Heinemeyer, Andreas
Stimson, Andrew
Gallego-Sala, Angela
Quillet, Anne
ROWSON, JAMES
Ritson, Jonathan
Alderson, Danielle
Robinson , Clare
Burkitt, Alexandra
Heinemeyer, Andreas
Stimson, Andrew
Gallego-Sala, Angela
Quillet, Anne
Source :
Science of the Total Environment vol.759 (2021) date: 2021-03-10 [ISSN 0048-9697]
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Peatlands are wetland ecosystems with great significance as natural habitats and as major global carbon stores. They have been subject to widespread exploitation and degradation with resulting losses in characteristic biota and ecosystem functions such as climate regulation. More recently, large-scale programmes have been established to restore peatland ecosystems and the various services they provide to society. Despite significant progress in peatland science and restoration practice, we lack a process-based understanding of how soil microbiota influence peatland functioning and mediate the resilience and recovery of ecosystem services, to perturbations associated with land use and climate change. We argue that there is a need to: in the short-term, characterise peatland microbial communities across a range of spatial and temporal scales and develop an improved understanding of the links between peatland habitat, ecological functions and microbial processes; in the medium term, define what a successfully restored ‘target’ peatland microbiome looks like for key carbon cycle related ecosystem services and develop microbial-based monitoring tools for assessing restoration needs; and in the longer term, to use this knowledge to influence restoration practices and assess progress on the trajectory towards ‘intact’ peatland status. Rapid advances in genetic characterisation of the structure and functions of microbial communities offer the potential for transformative progress in these areas, but the scale and speed of methodological and conceptual advances in studying ecosystem functions is a challenge for peatland scientists. Advances in this area require multidisciplinary collaborations between peatland scientists, data scientists and microbiologists and ultimately, collaboration with the modelling community. Developing a process-based understanding of the resilience and recovery of peatlands to perturbations, such as climate extremes, fires

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Science of the Total Environment vol.759 (2021) date: 2021-03-10 [ISSN 0048-9697]
Notes :
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.143467, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1291395059
Document Type :
Electronic Resource