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Prescribed Fire in UK Heather-Dominated Blanket Bog Peatlands: A Critical Review of “Carbon Storage and Sequestration by Habitat: A Review of the Evidence (Second Edition)” by Gregg et al., 2021

Heinemeyer, Andreas; Ashby, Mark A.

Authors

Andreas Heinemeyer



Abstract

Peatlands are a vast global carbon store. Both climate change and management have shaped peatlands over millennia, sometimes negatively, sometimes positively. Across the globe, prescribed fire is an important and well-recognised vegetation management tool used to promote biodiversity, increase habitat heterogeneity and mitigate uncontrolled wildfires. However, in the UK, there is an ongoing debate about the efficacy and legitimacy of using prescribed fire as a vegetation management tool. The debate centres around the extent to which prescribed burning is associated with a decline in habitat status and ecological function, especially in relation to carbon storage within heather-dominated blanket bog peatlands. Robust reviews of the evidence base are thus required to disentangle this debate and inform land management policies that ensure the protection and enhancement of blanket bog ecological functioning. Here, we critically review “Carbon storage and sequestration by habitat: a review of the evidence (second edition)” by Gregg et al., 2021. We see the value in synthesising the evidence on this topic but question the methodological approach used by Gregg et al. Another concern is their misrepresentation of evidence relating to prescribed burning impacts on blanket bog ecosystems and carbon budgets. We highlight these issues by focusing on the relevant peatland sections within the review by Gregg et al. and conclude by making a series of recommendations to improve the review’s scientific robustness and, thereby, its value to academics, land managers and policymakers.

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date May 4, 2023
Online Publication Date May 15, 2023
Publication Date May 15, 2023
Deposit Date May 30, 2023
Journal Fire
Print ISSN 2571-6255
Publisher MDPI
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 6
Issue 5
Pages 204
DOI https://doi.org/10.3390/fire6050204
Keywords Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous); Safety Research; Environmental Science (miscellaneous); Safety, Risk, Reliability and Quality; Building and Construction; Forestry