Title: PEATLAND UTILISATION IN MALAYSIA: THE PRESENT STATUS by
1PEATLAND UTILISATION IN MALAYSIA THE PRESENT
STATUSby
- James Dawos Mamit, MP
- President, the Malaysian Peat Society
Environmental Advisor to Sarawak State Govt.
2 Peatland Distribution
- Peatland area in Malaysia
- Total Area approximately 2.4 million ha (8 of
countrys total land area). - 1.6 million ha in Sarawak (13 of States land
area) - Characteristics
- Intersected by rivers, deltaic channels streams
- 65 organic matter
- pH 3.85 4.15
- Permanently saturated with water
3Land area - 328,750
km2 Malaysia - 2.4 million
ha Peninsular - 0.7 million ha Sarawak
- 1.6 million ha Sabah
- 0.1 million ha
4Economic Importance .
- Forestry
- RM5 billion worth of timber products (33 of
total export earnings of timber) from Sarawak. - Present rate of extraction in natural forests
600,000 m3 in PSF in Sarawak, mainly from areas
designated as Permanent Forest Estate. - No timber extraction in Peninsular Sabah due to
depletion.
5Economic Importance .
- Oil Palm Plantation
- About 400,000 ha already in mature plantations in
Peninsular. - About 635,000 ha already planted in Sarawak from
a total 800,000 ha alienated as plantations.
6Economic Importance .
- Ecotourism
- Unique ecosystems
- High diversity of flora High diversity of
fauna such as Orang Utan, Red-Banded Langur
Proboscis Monkey. - Non-timber products Latex, fruits, bark (no
longer done) medicinal plants (potential).
7Environmental Significance .
- Maintaining global carbon balance
- 15 of global peatland carbon reside in tropical
peatland draining of peatland oxidises carbon
CO2 is released into the atmosphere. - Providing reservoirs of freshwater
- peat dome has high water retention capacity
groundwater recharge is dependent upon ratio of
depth of peatland dome, vegetation water table
gradient.
8Environmental Significance .
- Stabilizing water levels peat releases stored
water during drier period, acts as sponges
absorbs water during heavy rainfall, thereby
reducing flood peaks mitigating flooding
water stress. - Buffer against saline intrusion
- waterlogged condition maintains constant base
flows of underground water, preventing saline
intrusion further upstream.
9Impact of Peatland Development .
- Degradation of Peat Swamp Forest (PSF) Ecosystem
- Repeated forest harvesting leads to destruction
of forest ecosystems fauna habitats, causing
hosts of fauna species to take refuge in
neighbouring areas become pests. - Loss of forest cover by conversion to agriculture
plantations causes plant animal species to
disappear or perish Red-banded langur most
affected.
10Impact of Peatland Development .
- Soil subsidence
- Draining of peatland lowers water table causing
subsidence - Rate of subsidence 20 50 cm per year over a
period of 5 years after drainage thereafter 5
cm per year. - Oxidation acidity
- Peatland water is acidic once drained,
peatwater causes severe damage to flora fauna
habitats in adjacent areas. - Compaction or shrinkage of peat soils may cause
groundwater containing fertilizer or pesticide
residues to flow from agricultural area to
adjacent water catchment area.
11Impact of Peatland Development .
- Flooding loss of water supply sources
- Conversion of peatland into non-peat diminishes
water retention capability, resulting in greater
discharge volume of water from surface runoff
rather than underground recharge, thus greater
risk of downstream flooding. - Loss of water catchment areas, jeopardising
water-supply intake.
12Impact of Peatland Development .
- Water pollution
- Agricultural NPS is leading source of water
pollution - Nitrates phosphates have eutrophication effect
- Pesticides fertilizers
13Impact of Peatland Development .
- Air pollution from peatland fires
- Peatland fires create much more smoke difficult
to extinguish, smoldering underground. - Fire hazard during prolonged drought
- Available peatland in Peninsular already
degraded by fires.
14Impact of Peatland Development .
- Loss of biodiversity
- Conversion to other land uses destroy forest
stands wildlife habitats
15Impact of Peatland Development .
- Loss of traditional knowledge
- Loss of sources of natural materials for useful
non-timber products traditional medicines if
peatland is cleared, leading to erosion of
traditional knowledge of indigenous people. - Impact on tourism
- Depletion of PSF has reduced opportunities on
ecotourism.
16Is sustainability achieveable in tropical
peatland utilisation?
17Development Management Strategies Should Consider
- Larger peatland areas as mainstay for forestry
biodiversity conservation - Periphery of independent peatland basin for
agricultural purposes - Baseline data information needed
- Least impact strategy for peatland development
18Sustainable Timber Production
Continuous assessment of harvested forest to
determine future stocks and conduct silvicultural
treatment where required
19Conservation in Totally Protected Areas (TPAs)
312,420 ha designated mainly in Sarawak
20CONCLUSION
- Understanding the physical, chemical, biological
ecological elements of tropical peatland
resources their responses to anthropogenic
causes are important - Attention should focus on conserving of what is
left - Sustainable development of peatland is necessary
for the benefits of the present future
generations
21Thank You
dawos_at_tm.net.my dawos_mamit_at_hotmail
.com