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A Novel Low-Cost, High-Resolution Camera System for Measuring Peat Subsidence and Water Table Dynamics

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posted on 2022-03-11, 09:51 authored by CD Evans, N Callaghan, A Jaya, A Grinham, S Sjogersten, SE Page, ME Harrison, K Kusin, LK Kho, M Ledger, S Evers, Z Mitchell, J Williamson, AD Radbourne, AJ Jovani-Sancho
Peatlands are highly dynamic systems, able to accumulate carbon over millennia under natural conditions, but susceptible to rapid subsidence and carbon loss when drained. Short-term, seasonal and long-term peat surface elevation changes are closely linked to key peatland attributes such as water table depth (WTD) and carbon balance, and may be measured remotely using satellite radar and LiDAR methods. However, field measurements of peat elevation change are spatially and temporally sparse, reliant on low-resolution manual subsidence pole measurements, or expensive sensor systems. Here we describe a novel, simple and low-cost image-based method for measuring peat surface motion and WTD using commercially available time-lapse cameras and image processing methods. Based on almost two years’ deployment of peat cameras across contrasting forested, burned, agricultural and oil palm plantation sites in Central Kalimantan, Indonesia, we show that the method can capture extremely high resolution (sub-mm) and high-frequency (sub-daily) changes in peat surface elevation over extended periods and under challenging environmental conditions. WTD measurements were of similar quality to commercially available pressure transducers. Results reveal dynamic peat elevation response to individual rain events, consistent with variations in WTD. Over the course of the relatively severe 2019 dry season, cameras in deep-drained peatlands recorded maximum peat shrinkage of over 8 cm, followed by partial rebound, leading to net annual subsidence of up to 5 cm. Sites with higher water tables, and where borehole irrigation was used to maintain soil moisture, had lower subsidence, suggesting potential to reduce subsidence through altered land-management. Given the established link between subsidence and CO emissions, these results have direct implications for the management of peatlands to reduce high current greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. Camera-based sensors provide a simple, low-cost alternative to commercial elevation, WTD and GHG flux monitoring systems, suitable for deployment at scale, and in areas where existing approaches are impractical or unaffordable. If ground-based observations of peat motion can be linked to measured GHG fluxes and with satellite-based monitoring tools, this approach offers the potential for a large-scale peatland monitoring tool, suitable for identifying areas of active carbon loss, targeting climate change mitigation interventions, and evaluating intervention outcomes. 2

Funding

The development and operation of the peat motion cameras was undertaken as part of the project PASSES: Peatland Assessment in Southeast Asia by Satellite, funded by the United Kingdom Space Agency International Partnership Program. Field deployments in Central Kalimantan were undertaken at field sites established by the project SUSTAINPEAT: Overcoming barriers to sustainable livelihoods and environments in smallholder agricultural systems on tropical peatland, funded by United Kingdom Research and Innovation via the Global Challenges Research Fund and the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) Grant number BB/P023533/1. CE received additional support from the UK Natural Environment Research Council grant Sustainable Use of Natural Resources to Improve Human Health and Support Economic Development (SUNRISE, Grant No. NE/R000131/1) ML was supported by a Natural Environment Research Council PhD studentship as part of the STARS Doctoral Training Center (Grant number NE/M009106/1). Groundwater level data used at the RePeat Burned site (December 2018 to September 2019) were obtained from the SATREPS: Science and Technology Research Partnership for Sustainable Development project ‘Wild fire and carbon management in peat-forest in Indonesia’ funded by Japan Science and Technology Agency and Japan International Cooperation Agency.

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Citation

Evans CD, Callaghan N, Jaya A, Grinham A, Sjogersten S, Page SE, Harrison ME, Kusin K, Kho LK, Ledger M, Evers S, Mitchell Z, Williamson J, Radbourne AD and Jovani-Sancho AJ (2021) A Novel Low-Cost, High-Resolution Camera System for Measuring Peat Subsidence and Water Table Dynamics. Front. Environ. Sci. 9:630752. doi: 10.3389/fenvs.2021.630752

Author affiliation

School of Geography, Geology and the Environment

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Frontiers in Environmental Science

Volume

9

Pagination

630752

Publisher

Frontiers Media

eissn

2296-665X

Acceptance date

2021-01-26

Copyright date

2021

Available date

2021-03-22

Language

en

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