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Managing Peatland Ecosystem Services: Current UK Policy and Future Challenges in a Changing World

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Sustainable peatland management has recently risen up the UK political agenda as links between peatland ecosystem services and key political priorities, such as rural livelihoods, agricultural production, biodiversity conservation, and carbon emissions, have become established. By adopting an ecosystem approach, something that has become internationally advocated through the Convention on Biological Diversity, to understanding the objectives and sustainability of UK peatland management, this paper reviews contemporary policies relating to three broad categories of peatland ecosystem service (provisioning; regulating and cultural), developed at multiple levels (global to local). We highlight problems associated with incomplete knowledge about complex peatland ecosystem processes and disconnected policies and strategies. The review concludes by discussing the kinds of integrated land use policies that are beginning to emerge in the UK and may shape future peatland management.

Keywords: biodiversity; carbon storage; ecosystem services; provision services; trade-offs

Document Type: Research Article

Affiliations: 1: School of Geosciences,University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, UK 2: Macaulay Land Use Research Institute, Aberdeen, UK 3: Institute of Biological, Environmental and Rural Sciences,University of Aberystwyth, Aberystwyth, UK 4: School of Earth and Environment,University of Leeds, Leeds, UK 5: Centre for Human and Ecological Sciences,Forest Research, RoslinMidlothian, UK 6: Pareto Consulting, Edinburgh, UK 7: Geography,University of Maryland, College ParkMaryland, United States

Publication date: September 1, 2011

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