Project Details
Overview
The project, "Peatscapes on the edge: ecological resilience to fire in the Anthropocene," is a three-year research initiative led by the University of Plymouth. It aims to understand how UK peatlands - critical natural defences against climate change - respond to and recover from wildfires.
Peatlands are extensive carbon stores, but increasing fire frequency, along with climate change impacts, threatens to transform them into carbon sources in some cases. This study focuses on three iconic UK landscapes: Dartmoor, the Peak District, and the Flow Country. By comparing these regions, we are investigating why some peatlands are more resilient to fire while others suffer long-term damage.
We are using a long-term ecological approach, combining palaeoecology with modern satellite technology. This allows us to see how past human activity and climate shifts have shaped the resilience of these ecosystems today. The research will also use high-tech chemical analysis to identify what kind of vegetation burned centuries ago under what conditions, providing a "fingerprint" of past fires.
The project is a collaborative effort between the University of Plymouth and the University of Nottingham and will involve working with key environmental organisations. This research aims to provide conservationists and practitioners with a roadmap for protecting these vital ecosystems, ensuring they continue to store carbon and support biodiversity in a warming world.
Peatlands are extensive carbon stores, but increasing fire frequency, along with climate change impacts, threatens to transform them into carbon sources in some cases. This study focuses on three iconic UK landscapes: Dartmoor, the Peak District, and the Flow Country. By comparing these regions, we are investigating why some peatlands are more resilient to fire while others suffer long-term damage.
We are using a long-term ecological approach, combining palaeoecology with modern satellite technology. This allows us to see how past human activity and climate shifts have shaped the resilience of these ecosystems today. The research will also use high-tech chemical analysis to identify what kind of vegetation burned centuries ago under what conditions, providing a "fingerprint" of past fires.
The project is a collaborative effort between the University of Plymouth and the University of Nottingham and will involve working with key environmental organisations. This research aims to provide conservationists and practitioners with a roadmap for protecting these vital ecosystems, ensuring they continue to store carbon and support biodiversity in a warming world.
Project Aims
The primary aim of the project is to determine how UK peatlands with different vegetation, fire histories, and land-use legacies vary in their ecological resilience, recovery dynamics, and vulnerability to changing climate trends and fire activity.
The project focuses on achieving four objectives:
1. Generate new, high-temporal resolution records of continuous fire activity across three contrasting UK peatscapes covering the last 5,000 years.
2. Select and analyse specific fire "events" from these records to characterise the nature of the burning and the peatland's state before and after the fire.
3. Use satellite remote sensing data to evaluate patterns of peatland disturbance and recovery from known fires over the last 40 years.
4. Determine the relationship between ecosystem conditions and their response to fire, particularly regarding carbon accumulation rates, to identify if behaviours have changed during the Anthropocene.
By meeting these objectives, the research seeks to identify "tipping points" where peatlands may transition from carbon sinks to carbon sources and provide evidence-based targets for restoration and management.
The project focuses on achieving four objectives:
1. Generate new, high-temporal resolution records of continuous fire activity across three contrasting UK peatscapes covering the last 5,000 years.
2. Select and analyse specific fire "events" from these records to characterise the nature of the burning and the peatland's state before and after the fire.
3. Use satellite remote sensing data to evaluate patterns of peatland disturbance and recovery from known fires over the last 40 years.
4. Determine the relationship between ecosystem conditions and their response to fire, particularly regarding carbon accumulation rates, to identify if behaviours have changed during the Anthropocene.
By meeting these objectives, the research seeks to identify "tipping points" where peatlands may transition from carbon sinks to carbon sources and provide evidence-based targets for restoration and management.
| Short title | Ecological resilience to fire in the Anthropocene |
|---|---|
| Acronym | PEATSCAPES |
| Status | Active |
| Effective start/end date | 4/05/26 → 3/05/29 |
Collaborative partners
- University of Plymouth (lead)
- University of Nottingham
UN Sustainable Development Goals
In 2015, UN member states agreed to 17 global Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to end poverty, protect the planet and ensure prosperity for all. This project contributes towards the following SDG(s):
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SDG 13 Climate Action
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SDG 15 Life on Land