Overview
This project is a three-year research initiative led by the sa¹ú¼Ê´«Ã½. 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.
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.