Any peatland worth its moss knows how to keep your feet wet. The water table should be hanging out just below the surface year-round. A stable hydrological system keeps the vegetation cover in peak bog condition, and that lush growth does the heavy lifting: locking away carbon and keeping the bog in the business of soaking up more than just rain.
A clear sign of a wet, healthy peatland is the presence of perennial natural bog pools. These pools contribute to regulating the peatland’s role in the global carbon budget and provide important breeding habitat for a range of invertebrates, as well as a reliable water source for wading birds and small mammals.