We estimated CH4 and N2O emissions from the main land-use types in rural landscapes using data from the literature (950 study sites/experiments from the temperate and boreal zone published from 1980 to 2009 in 165 scientific papers indexed by the ISI Web of Science) and assessed the emission potential of CH4 and N2O from rural landscapes in Estonia. According to this analysis, natural peatlands and marshes appeared to be the most important CH4 emitters, whereas N2O is emitted mainly from drained peatlands and marshes, set aside areas, conventional arable lands, fertilized grasslands, and coniferous and mixed forests - all on hydromorphic soils. The estimated median value of annual CH4-C and N2O-N fluxes for Estonian rural landscapes are 25,519 and 11,050t respectively. CH4 consumption makes up 13.2% of the emission. The largest CH4 emitters are peatlands (17,746 tCH(4)-C year(-1); 60%), whereas coniferous and mixed forests on hydromorphic soils with altered hydrologic regime are responsible for the bulk (51%) of N2O fluxes. The Global Warming Potential (GWP) of Estonian rural land-use types (42,685 km(2)) from potential CH4 and N2O fluxes is 5.99 million t of CO2 equivalents, of which N2O is responsible for 86%. Several measures for the further mitigation of greenhouse gas emission from rural landscapes are proposed. (C) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.