National Peatland Action ProgrammeRowenna HoskinBBC Wales5 hours agoDr Peter Jones has spent the past 30 years immersed – quite literally – in bogs, fens and wetlands, trying to help save the planet and earning himself the nickname The Bogfather in the process.These landscapes are now at the forefront of the climate crisis and Jones has been making an offer that policymakers are finding hard to refuse, a nature-based solution that tackles climate change, flooding, wildfires and biodiversity loss all at the same time.Peatlands store 30% of Wales’ land-based carbon, despite covering only 4% of the surface, but they are about 90% degraded, meaning they leak greenhouse gases instead of storing them.Healthy peatland can slow the flow of water, helping prevent flooding, and act as natural firebreaks during wildfires – both of which are expected to become more common as the climate warms – and protecting them has become Jones’s lifelong mission.”I certainly wouldn’t have come up with that myself,” he laughs when asked about his nickname.”A couple of our younger, enthusiastic colleagues started calling me that.”But the name stuck and, given how much work he has done to restore peatland, few would argue with it, said colleague Hanna Huws.National Peatland Action ProgrammeJones’s interest in the natural world began with birds, but his passion for peatland was ignited at age eight during a drizzly visit to Cors Caron, a national nature reserve near Tregaron. Now in his 60s, his love of peatland has endured and it often means he stops on walks to investigate, “probably much to the annoyance of my long-suffering family,” he laughed.Jones said wetlands were among the UK’s last truly natural places and “endlessly interesting”.”They’re quite wild… with a lot of the characteristics of genuinely natural habitat.”But it is what lies beneath that fascinates him most.National Peatland Action Programme”A peat soil is basically composed of the partially decomposed remains of plants.”As the peat grows, it traps within it anything that falls on the surface… grains of pollen, dust, even bits of volcanic ash and even bigger objects,” including bodies, he said. The reason 90% of Wales’ peatland is damaged is because it was historically “perceived as having relatively little value” so trees were planted and farmers were encourage to drain them for agriculture.Jones said it had also played “an immensely important part of the cultural and social history of Wales”.”In past centuries rural communities may not have had very much money, there often wasn’t very much wood around to burn and so peat was seen as a really important source of fuel.”National Peatland Action ProgrammeDamaged peatland is also “much more prone to erosion” leading to “peat cliffs” where “all the peat around it has been slowly eroded away by wind and rain right down to bedrock”. Jones said the best way to spot healthy peatland was the plants growing on it, “there’ll be grasses, sedges, heathers, critically there will often be bog mosses of the genus sphagnum”. This moss, which can hold 20 times its own weight in water, is “really good at building peat”.Jones and his colleagues help farmers and landowners restore peatland which, when healthy, is home to “a whole range of animals, including many scarce or threatened invertebrates”.National Peatland Action ProgrammeJones said his favourite species was the fly orchid found in fens on Anglesey, where he lives. “It’s a fascinating plant,” he said.Despite the flowers looking like flies, they actually attract digger wasps, according to The Wildlife Trusts.They release a scent mimicking a female’s pheromones, luring in males that attempt to mate with them.They are dusted with pollen, which they then carry to the next flower which deceives them.Peter JonesSuch interesting biodiversity relies on healthy peatland, which Wales does not have much of.But there …