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Mires on the Moors Project

Mires Project

Mires Project

Mires Project

Mires Project

Mires Project

Quantifying the benefits of upland restoration for the water industry

This research strengthens the scientific understanding of changes in water quality, habitat dynamics and flood risk following moorland restoration, in the peatlands of the UK’s South West.

Read the project report online

Download the full report

About the Mires project

The peatlands of the UK’s South West are important locally, nationally and internationally. They are large and long term carbon (C) stores, provide drinking water and support rare habitats. However, as they are situated at the limit of favourable climatic conditions for peat formation and have been subject to anthropogenic pressures, including drainage, peat-cutting, grazing and burning activities, these landscapes are highly vulnerable to reductions in ecohydrological function and degradation. Extensive and ongoing restoration works have been carried out in an attempt to return these peatlands to more natural hydrological behaviour, and promote a suite of associated ecosystem services.

Research conducted by this team supports the restoration efforts in these landscapes through quantifying the effect of upland restoration on habitat status, water quality and natural flood management. This is achieved through developing a spatially-integrated understanding of how ecohydrological restoration:

  • Drives water quality changes, carbon stocks and fluxes, reducing in DOC loading, water colour and carbon cycling.
  • Drives changes in water storage and base flow regimes, reducing flood risk and improving water security.
  • Alters habitat structure and function, enhancing priority habitats and delivering biodiversity and carbon sequestration benefits.

Our research is conducted across multiple spatial scales, where fine/headwater catchment scale monitoring is used in combination with remotely sensed and modelled data, to provide landscape scale predictions of changes associated with moorland restoration and management.

Team members

  • Prof Richard Brazier (PI)
  • Dr Naomi Gatis
  • Dr David Luscombe
  • Dr Pia Benaud
  • Dr Emilie Grand-Clement
  • Josie Ashe
  • Paul Tansley
  • Assoc. Prof Karen Anderson
  • Prof. Iain Hartley
  • Assoc. Prof Angela Gallego-Sala

Funding 

This research is funded by South West Water (SWW), in partnership with Exmoor National Park Authority (ENPA), Dartmoor National Park Authority (DNPA), and the Environment Agency (EA).