PEATLAND HYDROLOGY IN TROPICAL INDONESIA
Prior to recent anthropogenic disturbance, peat covered approximately 232,000 km2 in Indonesia and Malaysia. Most of the peat is on coastal lowlands (<20 m elevation) up to 100 km wide. Individual peat deposits cover interfluve areas, are bypassed by rivers draining interior mountains, and are not influenced by marine water. Vegetation on domed peat is dominated by trees 20-40 m tall. From the surface to the base of the peat deposits, pH increases from 3-4 to 4-6, total dissolved major cations (TDS) increase from ~5 to ~17-110 ppm, and hydraulic conductivity (K) decreases from >10-2 to ~10-3 cm/s. Pore waters in sediments below the peat have a pH of 5-7, TDS ~83 to 260 ppm, and K ~10-4 cm/s.
Cross sections in thick (>5 m) peat deposits with only minor disturbance show the majority of peat has pore water chemistry and hydraulic conductivity similar to surface peat. In parts of each peat deposit, thin layers near the base of the peat are influenced by ground water flow of pore water from sediments below the peat. Literature review suggests that the proportion of peat that is rainfall influenced with low pH and low TDS is probably greater in tropical ombrogenous peat deposits than in temperate peatlands. Any such latitudinal differences in peat hydrology must be considered in global models that incorporate peatland processes, for example, the role of peat in the global carbon cycle.