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Quantification of Peat Thickness and Stored Carbon at the Landscape Scale in Tropical Peatlands: A Comparison of Airborne Geophysics and an Empirical Topographic Method
Abstract
©2019. The Authors. Peatlands play a key role in the global carbon cycle, sequestering
and releasing large amounts of carbon. Despite their importance, a reliable method
for the quantification of peatland thickness and volume is still missing, particularly
for peat deposits located in the tropics given their limited accessibility, and for
scales of measurement representative of peatland environments (i.e., of hundreds of
km2). This limitation also prevents the accurate quantification of the stored carbon
as well as future greenhouse gas emissions due to ongoing peat degradation. Here we
present the results obtained using the airborne electromagnetic (AEM) method, a geophysical
surveying tool, for peat thickness detection at the landscape scale. Based on a large
amount of data collected on an Indonesian peatland, our results show that the AEM
method provides a reliable and accurate 3-D model of peatlands, allowing the quantification
of their volume and carbon storage. A comparison with the often used empirical topographic
approach, which is based on an assumed correlation between peat thickness and surface
topography, revealed larger errors across the landscape associated with the empirical
approach than the AEM method when predicting the peat thickness. As a result, the
AEM method provides higher estimates (22%) of organic carbon pools than the empirical
method. We show how in our case study the empirical method tends to underestimate
the peat thickness due to its inability to accurately detect the large variability
in the elevation of the peat/mineral substrate interface, which is better quantified
by the AEM method.
Type
Journal articleSubject
Science & TechnologyPhysical Sciences
Geosciences, Multidisciplinary
Geology
peatlands
airborne geophysics
organic carbon
peatland topography
GROUND-PENETRATING RADAR
RESISTIVITY IMAGING ERI
ELECTROMAGNETIC DATA
INDONESIA
LIMITS
SWAMP
STRATIGRAPHY
KALIMANTAN
INVERSION
BOREHOLE
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/20360Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1029/2019JF005273Publication Info
Silvestri, S; Knight, R; Viezzoli, A; Richardson, CJ; Anshari, GZ; Dewar, N; ... Comas,
X (2019). Quantification of Peat Thickness and Stored Carbon at the Landscape Scale in Tropical
Peatlands: A Comparison of Airborne Geophysics and an Empirical Topographic Method.
Journal of Geophysical Research: Earth Surface, 124(12). pp. 3107-3123. 10.1029/2019JF005273. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/20360.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Neal Flanagan
Visiting Assistant Professor
Curtis J. Richardson
Research Professor of Resource Ecology in the Division of Environmental Science and
Policy
Curtis J. Richardson is Professor of Resource Ecology and founding Director of the
Duke University Wetland Center in the Nicholas School of the Environment. Dr. Richardson
earned his degrees from the State University of New York and the University of Tennessee.
His research interests in applied ecology focus on long-term ecosystem response to
large-scale perturbations such as climate change, toxic materials, trace metals, flooding,
or nutrient additions. He has specific interests in phosphor
Sonia Silvestri
Adjunct Associate Professor
Silvestri received her doctoral training in Environmental System Modelling at the
University of Padova, with a focus on remote sensing and the interdependence of salt
marsh morphology and halophytic vegetation. She received her Laurea in Environmental
Sciences from the University Ca’ Foscari in Venice. Silvestri joined the Nicholas
School (Duke University) in 2011, where she teaches “Introduction to Satellite
Remote Sensing” and “Remote Sensing of Coastal Environments&rdq
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