posted on 2025-11-23, 02:56authored byJade Skye, Joe Melton, Colin Goldblatt, Louis Saumier, Angela Gallego Sala, Michelle Garneau, Scott R. Winton, Erick B. Bahati, Juan C. Benavides, Lee Fedorchuk, Gérard Imani, Carol Kagaba Kairumba, Frank Kansiime, Mariusz Lamentowicz, Michel Mbasi, Daria Wochal, Sambor Czerwiński, Jacek Landowski, Joanna Landowska, Vincent Maire, Minna M. Väliranta, Matthew Warren, Lydia E. S. Cole, Marissa A. Davies, Erik Andrew Lilleskov, Jingjing Sun, Yuwan Wang
<p>Peatlands are globally important carbon stores that face increasing threats from human activities and climate change impacts. Comprehensive peatland data are essential for understanding ecosystem responses to these stressors and mapping their past and current characteristics. Current peatland datasets remain limited due to poor representation in global soil mapping initiatives and the absence of a recognized, coordinated central repository for peat depth data. Existing compilations often contain errors, duplicates, and outdated observations, requiring researchers to repeatedly gather and harmonize data on a study-by-study basis. To address these challenges, we present Peat-DBase version 1.0—a harmonized, quality-controlled global compilation of basal peat depth measurements.</p>
<p><br>Version 1.0 of Peat-DBase comprises 204 902 peat depth measurements from 29 sources spanning 54.933°S to 82.217°N, with a significant proportion of measurements in Atlantic Canada and Scotland due to the inclusion of two particularly large datasets focused on those regions. We supplement the peat study measurements with 94 615 non-peat soil measurements to ensure comprehensive coverage consistent with the relatively low spatial coverage of peatlands globally. Despite the uneven distribution of peat depth measurements, Peat-DBase contains reasonable coverage of the major global peatland complexes in temperate and boreal North America and Europe, portions of Russia, the Amazon and Congo basins, and the Malay Archipelago, though gaps remain in the lower Amazon Basin, Eastern Indonesia, and Eastern Russia. From the current data, peat depths have a median value of 130 cm (IQR: 60 - 240), although this is influenced by a predominance of measurements in the North Atlantic regions. Peat-DBase’s deepest measurement is 2 223 cm.</p>
<p><br>While sampling biases and measurement uncertainties exist, Peat-DBase provides an essential foundation for global peatland research. Peat-DBase is under active development and future versions will incorporate additional datasets, information on current peatland status, and improved positional uncertainty quantification. Peat-DBase eliminates the need for overlapping data compilation efforts while identifying critical observational gaps for future research. </p>
History
Publisher
Zenodo
Theme
Not specified
ISO Topic Category
farming
biota
National Agricultural Library Thesaurus terms
soil; climate change; North America; Indonesia; basins; databases; Canada; peat; Republic of the Congo; ecosystems; peatlands; carbon; humans; data collection; uncertainty; Scotland; Russia; Europe