A poem by Sarah Hill

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Sarah Hill is a member of 26, a not-for-profit organisation for writers and anyone who believes in the power of words.

Sarah has written a piece about Sphagnum for a project called 26Plants launched in partnership with the Bloomsbury Festival and the Wildlife Trusts. Her piece will be highlighted on 26’s Instagram page and on X/Twitter on National Moss Day.

https://bloomsburyfestival.org.uk/26-plants/

Mop-headed miracles

Alive and dead

 Simultaneously.

Devonian emergents

Amphibians of the plant world – intimate with both air and water.

Simple stems, branches, leaves and rhizoids

Rootless

                        Flowerless,    

                                    Fruitless

                                                Seedless.                               

Individually insignificant

Collectively miraculous

Ecosystem engineers: creating land that’s mainly water.

Growing up

Their motley, rumpled quilts and carpets capture carbon.

Laying down

Dead cells wick water to the living capitulum.           

Sinking

Barely decaying

                        Accumulating as peat

                                    millimetre by millimetre…

                                                over millennia.

Becoming

Curator of history’s secrets.

Vulnerable

To human exploitation and conflict, pollution and climate change.

Globally Significant

Guardians against our predicted future, Sphagnum mosses must stay in-situ.

Always

Dead and alive.

Sarah says:

My introduction to Sphagnum mosses was in Northumberland, on a memorable class visit to auger peat cores for pollen analysis, where I almost lost a Wellington to the malodorous, oozy depths beneath the bog’s spongy surface.  On my second encounter, in Bavaria, our group pogoed in unison on a raised bog, sending ripples across its surface, causing the fringing trees to kiss crowns as they rocked to-and-fro.

Forty years later, I am stunned to discover that there is more living carbon in Sphagnum mosses than any other single genus of plant on the planet. More carbon is stored globally in the peatlands that Sphagnum mosses create below their sunlit carpets, than is stored by the world’s forests.  Indeed, these bog habitats are the globe’s second largest store of carbon, after the oceans.

Almost 10 per cent of the UK’s land area is covered in bog and it’s the country’s single most important terrestrial carbon store, locking away at least 3 billion tonnes of carbon.

It seems quite incredible that these small, mop-headed, sodden plants, that grow in dense, colourful communities in peat bogs and other wetland habitats, play such a vital role in mitigating climate change.

Peat bogs are crucial water reservoirs too. In the UK 70 per cent of our drinking water comes from peatland river catchments.  Only one in 20 cells in a Sphagnum plant is alive. The remaining cells are dead but integral to the plant’s success, filled with up to 20 times their weight in water.

Appearing as some of the first land plants, more than 350 million years ago, Sphagnum mosses are now regarded as keystone species, creating the acid, water-logged, nutrient-poor living conditions that allow, other specialist wetland plants and animals to thrive and, organic matter to be preserved for millennia.

Today, Sphagnum mosses and peatlands are under threat from factors including: harvesting, agricultural drainage, burning, air pollution, tree planting and over-grazing.  In the UK 80 per cent of peatland habitats are believed to be damaged.

However, there is some good news; researchers have developed ways to restore these damaged habitats, enabling Sphagnum mosses to recolonise and start building up peat again.  There has also been a successful Wildlife Trusts’ campaign “Keep peat in bogs not bags”. From 2024 selling peat compost for domestic use in England will be banned. Two small steps on the way to protecting the water-trapping, carbon-catching Sphagnum mosses.

Published: 19 October 2023