Tracking the Colour of Peatlands: community science project

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Tracking the Colour of Peatlands: community science project

Dr Scott J. Davidson (University of Plymouth) has developed a community-science driven project to look at how peatlands change colour across the growing season (also known as green leaf phenology). Read more to find out how you can get involved too.

Dr Scott J. Davidson (University of Plymouth) has developed a community-science driven project to look at how peatlands change colour across the growing season (also known as green leaf phenology). He piloted this project in Alberta, Canada in collaboration with Ducks Unlimited Canada, where members of the public collect photographs of peatlands via their smartphones. These photographs can provide key information on how the colour of peatlands change across the year (and eventually, between years) and can be linked to a variety of factors such as disturbance type or increasing air temperatures.

Person standing in front on of a peatland colours installation.

Tracking Peatland Colours Installation. Credit Paul Thomas

With the project currently in its third year in Canada, Scott has expanded this to two more signs in the Flow country, Scotland and one at the Eden Project. Another will soon be installed at Grande Plée Bleue, a beautiful publicly accessible peatland in Quebec, Canada.  He will be sending phone cradles and signs to collaborators in Alaska, Peru, France and Poland (amongst others) who are very keen to have this project on their sites.

Series of fixed point photographs showing vegetation colour changes between June and September 2023. Credit Dr. Scott Davidson 

Series of fixed point photographs showing vegetation colour changes between

June and September 2023. Credit Dr. Scott Davidson 

Peatland colours installation text: Help us track plant colours in peatlands. We can use smartphone photos to understand how pants green up over the summer, the timing of when they are at their maximum greenness and ow they start to turn brown in the autumn. Artwork shows a peatland landscape over the different seasons ranging from greens and browns.

Installation artwork. Credit Dr. Scott Davidson 

Scott is now looking for more collaborators here in the UK. If you have a publicly accessible peatland that has a reasonable amount of foot traffic and a boardwalk, please get in touch with him to discuss installing a phone cradle and sign.



To learn more or take part please contact Scott: scott.davidson@plymouth.ac.uk