Product has been added to the basket
Item has been added to bibliography

Public Lecture: The role of peatlands as natural climate solutions

Date:
16 December 2024
Add to my calendar
Event type:
Hybrid, Lecture
Organised by:
Geological Society Events, Public Lectures 2024, Climate
Venue:
Hybrid In person at Burlington House and Virtual via Zoom
Event status:
EVENT OPEN

Date, time and location

This Public Lecture will take place on Monday 16 December 2024 at 18:00.

This is a hybrid event, which can be attended in person at Burlington House, Piccadilly, London, or online via Zoom.

Event details

Peatlands are among the most valuable ecosystems on earth and are one of our best nature-based solutions to climate change. Not only are they important for biodiversity, water quality and flood management, but they are also the largest terrestrial carbon store, storing more carbon than all other vegetation types combined. Peatlands cover vast areas of the globe but despite their importance, they are becoming increasingly threatened by both climatic (e.g., wildfires) and anthropogenic (e.g., land-use change) disturbances. This presentation will explore the variety of peatlands that are found both across the world, as well as the types of disturbances that impact the functioning of these incredibly important ecosystems. Finally, Scott will highlight what we can do to prevent losing one of the best players in the fight against climate change.

Speaker

Dr Scott J.Davidson (University of Plymouth)

Dr Scott J. Davidson is a Lecturer in Ecosystem Resilience at the University of Plymouth, UK. He completed my undergraduate degree in Geography at the University of Dundee, Scotland in 2012 and his MSc in Polar and Alpine Change at the University of Sheffield, UK in 2013. In 2018 he was awarded a PhD from the University of Sheffield, UK, looking at greenhouse gas emissions from arctic tundra landscapes in Alaska.

His research is focused on the resilience of global peatland and wetland ecosystems to both climate change and disturbance regimes. His research combines field research, laboratory analysis, remote sensing and modelling approaches to better constrain spatio-temporal carbon dynamics of wetland ecosystems.

Programme

17:45 – 18:00: Guests will arrive for the Public Lecture

18:00 – 19:00: Talk takes place (including a Q&A)

19:00: Event ends

Registration

This lecture is free to attend; however, we are a registered charity (number:210161) and we would welcome donations. If you would like to donate, you can do so here.

You can register for both in person and virtual tickets here.

If you wish to join our mailing list, please email [email protected]

Geolsoc Contact

Conference Office

The Geological Society
Burlington House
Piccadilly
London
W1J 0BG