Journal article

Building capacity for estimating fire emissions from tropical peatlands; a worked example from Indonesia

H Krisnawati, L Volkova, B Budiharto, F Zamzani, WC Adinugroho, MA Qirom, CJ Weston

Scientific Reports | NATURE PORTFOLIO | Published : 2023

Open access

Abstract

Tropical peatlands are globally significant in the terrestrial carbon cycle as they are comprised of a large forest carbon sink and a large peat carbon store—both of which can potentially be exchanged with the atmosphere on decadal time frames. Greenhouse gas emissions from fire-disturbance and development of tropical peatlands over the last few decades, and the potential for ongoing emissions, highlights the need for policy to slow or halt emissions and to activate mechanisms to sequester carbon through restoration of degraded peatlands. The UN REDD + scheme provides a means for developing countries to receive payments for avoided deforestation and forest degradation, but the steps to achie..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Funding Acknowledgements

This work was supported by the Australian Government Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research and the Asia-Pacific Network for Sustainable Forest Management and Rehabilitation (APFNet).