posted on 2025-07-24, 15:44authored byR Scott Winton, Juan C Benavides, Edmundo Mendoza, Antje Uhde, Adam Hastie, Eurídice N Honorio Coronado, Andres Giovanny Hernandez Ortega, Stella Paukku, Bailey Mullins, Jhon del Aguila Pasquel, Gerardo A Aymard-Corredor, Tim R Baker, Freddie C Draper, Gerardo Flores Llampazo, Rafael Herrera, Oliver L Phillips, José Manuel Reyna Huaymacari, Hans ter Steege, Juliana Stropp, Ian T Lawson, Angela V Gallego-Sala, Arnoud BoomArnoud Boom, Bernhard Wehrli, Alison M Hoyt
<p dir="ltr">Peatlands are some of the world’s most carbon-dense ecosystems and release substantial quantities of greenhouse gases when degraded. However, conserving peatlands in many tropical areas is challenging due to limited knowledge of their distribution. To address this, we surveyed soils and plant communities in Colombia’s eastern lowlands, where few peatlands have previously been described. We documented peat soils >40 cm thick at 51 of more than 100 surveyed wetlands. We use our data to update a regional peatland classification, which includes a new and possibly widespread peatland type, ‘the white-sand peatland,’ as well as two distinctive open-canopy sub-types. Analysis of peat bulk density and organic matter content from 39 intact peat cores indicates that the average per-area carbon densities of these sites (490–1230 Mg C ha−1, depending on type) is 4–10 times the typical carbon stock of a (non-peatland) Amazonian forest. We used remote sensing to upscale our observations, generating the first data-driven peatland map for the region. The total estimated carbon stock of these peatlands of 1.91 petagrams (Pg C) (2-sigma confidence interval, 0.60–4.22) approaches that of South America’s largest known peatland complex in the northern Peruvian Amazon, indicating that substantial peat carbon stores on the continent have yet to be documented. These observations indicate that tropical peatlands may be far more diverse in form and structure and broadly distributed than is widely understood, which could have important implications for tropical peatland conservation strategies.</p>
History
Author affiliation
College of Science & Engineering
Geography, Geology & Environment
All field data described in this manuscript as well as
codes used to generate figures will be archived in the
open access Dryad database. Plant specimens collec-
ted as part of this research are at the Herbario del
Orinoquia (Herbario LLANOS).
The data that support the findings of this study are
openly available at the following URL/DOI: https://
doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000520816 [90].