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14 - Ecosystem services, degradation and restoration of peat swamps in the South East Asian tropics

from Part II - Perspectives on peatland restoration

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2016

René Dommain
Affiliation:
University of Greifswald, Germany
Ingo Dittrich
Affiliation:
Dr. Dittrich and Partner Hydro-Consult GmbH, Dresden, Germany
Wim Giesen
Affiliation:
Euroconsult/BMB Mott MacDonald, The Netherlands
Hans Joosten
Affiliation:
University of Greifswald
Dipa Satriadi Rais
Affiliation:
Wetlands International – Indonesia Programme, Bogor, Indonesia
Marcel Silvius
Affiliation:
Wetlands International Headquarters, The Netherlands
Iwan Tri Cahyo Wibisono
Affiliation:
Wetlands International – Indonesia Programme, Bogor, Indonesia
Aletta Bonn
Affiliation:
German Centre für Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv) Halle-Jena-Leipzig
Tim Allott
Affiliation:
University of Manchester
Martin Evans
Affiliation:
University of Manchester
Hans Joosten
Affiliation:
Institute of Botany and Landscape Ecology
Rob Stoneman
Affiliation:
Yorkshire Wildlife Trust
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Summary

Introduction

The coastline of Sarawak appears to the casual observer monotonous and uninteresting. A coastal fringe of littoral forest or mangrove merges quickly into a flat plain behind which the inland mountain ranges appear in the distance. […][F]rom the mouth of the Batang Lupar to Kedurong Point – a distance of 200 miles – there is no high ground in the vicinity of the coast. Apart from the immediate coastal or riparian fringe, subject to regular or occasional inundation, the whole plain has been and still is largely covered in swamp forest growing on peat, recorded depths of which may exceed fifty feet.

(Anderson 1963).

Fifty years later this nearly untouched world in northwest Borneo no longer exists. Of Sarawak's original 1.4 million hectares of peat swamp forest, 80% is already lost. Most of the peat swamp forest has been drained and cleared to make way for plantations of African oil palm Elaeis guineensis to boost the production of highly valued palm oil (Wetlands International 2010; Miettinen et al. 2012a). This situation exemplifies the overall trend of peat swamp destruction and conversion in South East Asia. Of the original 15.5 million hectares of South East Asian peat swamp forests, less than 5 million hectares (32%) remains today, mostly in some state of degradation. Commercial and illegal logging and fire have affected nearly all remaining peat forests in western Indonesia and Malaysia, including conservation areas. There are now no untouched peat swamp forests and not one hydrologically intact peat dome remaining in Malaysia, Kalimantan and Sumatra (e.g. Silvius and Giesen 1996; Miettinen and Liew 2010; Wetlands International 2010). If current rates of deforestation continue, this region will lose its last peat swamp forests by 2030 (Miettinen et al. 2012b). The possible exception is the small state of Brunei, where most peat swamps are well protected.

In Europe, the region with proportionally the greatest peatland losses worldwide, most peatland degradation took place over the past four centuries and halted in the 1980s (Joosten 2009b). In contrast, South East Asian peatland destruction is a very recent phenomenon that largely started in the 1970s and has dramatically accelerated over the last 20 years.

Type
Chapter
Information
Peatland Restoration and Ecosystem Services
Science, Policy and Practice
, pp. 253 - 288
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2016

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