Peat bogs... spongy, multistory holders of water and carbon.. built by mosses to attune their living...
So, how does this work?... I looked into Stephan Harding's "Animate Earth" and learned...
Mosses like wet and damp, and they need rain... buckets of rain...
... hence their ability to seed clouds and trigger rainfall by releasing sulphur gases up into the air.
And in the process, they drown large trees. Peat bogs and forests are not agreeable.
Peat forms out of dead mosses which release humic and fulvic acids to prevent their breakdown.
So they stay and build upon each other to reach multi-meter heights of carbon storage.
And on the surface, there is a rich life of mosses and small plants... colorful and lively...
Since we live in the climate conscious time, I have to stress the peat bogs' role in cooling our Planet:
- Peat layers are carbon storages.
- Seeded clouds keep the Earth in shade.
- Their flats retain the snow which reflects sun rays from the Earth.
- By releasing rich-nutrient water into the ocean,
they help feed starved marine algae thus keeping them around to use this extra CO2.
I have never seen peat bogs... but have wished to see them... just travel north... north enough...