Tropical peatlands management and climate change: a case study in Sumatra, Indonesia

Tropical peatland is an important terrestrial carbon pool and habitat of endemic species that requires sustainable management for the benefit of local livelihoods and global climate. The size of carbon stocks and accumulation are staggering but there is no clear and easy access to markets for tropic...

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Autores principales: Murdiyarso, Daniel, Suryadiputra, I.N., Wahyunto
Formato: Capítulo de libro
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Peat Society 2004
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/19022
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author Murdiyarso, Daniel
Suryadiputra, I.N.
Wahyunto
author_browse Murdiyarso, Daniel
Suryadiputra, I.N.
Wahyunto
author_facet Murdiyarso, Daniel
Suryadiputra, I.N.
Wahyunto
author_sort Murdiyarso, Daniel
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Tropical peatland is an important terrestrial carbon pool and habitat of endemic species that requires sustainable management for the benefit of local livelihoods and global climate. The size of carbon stocks and accumulation are staggering but there is no clear and easy access to markets for tropical peatland conservation. Meanwhile the benefits of environmental services are largerly enjoyed by national wealthier and global beneficieries. This paper demonstrates the loss of carbon at various sites as part of development opportunity at various peatland environments and social structure. Peatland development in the tropics including Indonesia is driven by the increasing need for land, food, and fiber under the pressure of population growth. In Sumatra, where peatland covered an area of 7.2 Mha in 1990 was estimated that it has reduced to 6.5 Mha in the recent survey in 2002. The common practice in peatland development is deforestation followed by extensive drainage before settlement and agricultural development taking place. Under such conditions it is estimated that Sumatran peatlands have released 3.47 Gt C contributing to global climate change, in addition to the emerging local environmental problems, such as flooding and drought leading to soil acidity and fires.
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spelling CGSpace190222025-01-24T14:12:38Z Tropical peatlands management and climate change: a case study in Sumatra, Indonesia Murdiyarso, Daniel Suryadiputra, I.N. Wahyunto deforestation carbon emission peatlands climate change water management conferences Tropical peatland is an important terrestrial carbon pool and habitat of endemic species that requires sustainable management for the benefit of local livelihoods and global climate. The size of carbon stocks and accumulation are staggering but there is no clear and easy access to markets for tropical peatland conservation. Meanwhile the benefits of environmental services are largerly enjoyed by national wealthier and global beneficieries. This paper demonstrates the loss of carbon at various sites as part of development opportunity at various peatland environments and social structure. Peatland development in the tropics including Indonesia is driven by the increasing need for land, food, and fiber under the pressure of population growth. In Sumatra, where peatland covered an area of 7.2 Mha in 1990 was estimated that it has reduced to 6.5 Mha in the recent survey in 2002. The common practice in peatland development is deforestation followed by extensive drainage before settlement and agricultural development taking place. Under such conditions it is estimated that Sumatran peatlands have released 3.47 Gt C contributing to global climate change, in addition to the emerging local environmental problems, such as flooding and drought leading to soil acidity and fires. 2004 2012-06-04T09:09:03Z 2012-06-04T09:09:03Z Book Chapter https://hdl.handle.net/10568/19022 en International Peat Society Murdiyarso, D., Suryadiputra, I.N., Wahyunto. 2004. Tropical peatlands management and climate change: a case study in Sumatra, Indonesia . In: Juhani Paivanen (ed.). Proceedings of the 12th International Peat Congress on Wise Use of Peatlands, 6-11 June 2004, Tampere, Finland: vol.1 - oral presentations. :698-706. Jyvaskyla, Finland, International Peat Society. ISBN: 952-99401-0-6..
spellingShingle deforestation
carbon
emission
peatlands
climate change
water management
conferences
Murdiyarso, Daniel
Suryadiputra, I.N.
Wahyunto
Tropical peatlands management and climate change: a case study in Sumatra, Indonesia
title Tropical peatlands management and climate change: a case study in Sumatra, Indonesia
title_full Tropical peatlands management and climate change: a case study in Sumatra, Indonesia
title_fullStr Tropical peatlands management and climate change: a case study in Sumatra, Indonesia
title_full_unstemmed Tropical peatlands management and climate change: a case study in Sumatra, Indonesia
title_short Tropical peatlands management and climate change: a case study in Sumatra, Indonesia
title_sort tropical peatlands management and climate change a case study in sumatra indonesia
topic deforestation
carbon
emission
peatlands
climate change
water management
conferences
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/19022
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AT suryadiputrain tropicalpeatlandsmanagementandclimatechangeacasestudyinsumatraindonesia
AT wahyunto tropicalpeatlandsmanagementandclimatechangeacasestudyinsumatraindonesia