Name
B2 Peatland Disturbance and Policy in Canada (Part 2)
Date & Time
Monday, May 25, 2026, 2:00 PM - 3:30 PM
Nazia Tabassum
Description

Peatlands across Canada store ~150 billion tonnes of carbon (C) and are subject to increased pressures from climate change and the push for industrial development in peatland rich regions. For Canada to meet net-zero carbon emissions, it is critical that irrecoverable C remain in peatlands, and that the C sink function of peatlands remains intact. To adequately understand how disturbances to peatlands will contribute to climate change through the release of carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane (CH4) or through weakened C sink capacity, research on the response and recovery of peatlands to disturbances is needed. Equally as important is understanding the laws and policies across Canada that impact peatlands, including those designed to protect, mitigate damage to, or legislate recovery from industrial disturbances. This session welcomes all submissions related to peatland research, with preference given to submissions that examine the response of peatlands to impacts of climate change (e.g. fire, warming and drying, permafrost thaw) and industrial disturbances (e.g. drainage, roads, mining - including exploration activities, peat harvesting). Additionally, we encourage the submission of abstracts that discuss the policy relevance of their work, or how Canada’s policies are applicable to peatlands (which may include law and policy for water management, industry – e.g., roads and mining, and other) have reduced impacts to, or managed or recovered, critical ecosystem services provided by peatlands.

• 2:00 pm – 2:15 pm | How do restoration techniques applied to seismic lines affect ground layer evapotranspiration from peatlands? – Maryam Bayatvarkeshi
• 2:15 pm – 2:30 pm | Ecosystem Carbon Balance Responses to Seismic Line Disturbance and Restoration in Boreal Peatlands – Nazia Tabassum
• 2:30 pm – 2:45 pm | Hydrologic Connectivity of a Road-Bisected Peatland Complex in the Alberta Oil Sands Region – Joseph Tuffner
• 2:45 pm – 3:00 pm | Peat physical and chemical properties in relation to vegetation type in a restored fen – Rose Simard
• 3:00 pm – 3:15 pm | Divergent outcomes, convergent function? GHG exchange and new peat accumulation across ecohydrological assemblages in a 17-year-old restored peatland – Melanie Bird

Location Name
DSU-Council Chambers
Full Address
Dalhousie University
Halifax NS
Canada
Convenors
Sophie Wilkinson, Simon Fraser University, Adam Kirkwood, Bin Xu, Kelly Bona
Session Type
Session