Abstract

AbstractThe rate of blanket peat erosion was measured at an upland site in central Wales during the 1983‐1984 drought years. Erosion pins, a peat surface sediment trap, and sediment sampling in the effluent stream, were used to estimate the rate of peat surface recession and the rate of organic sediment loss from the catchment. An overall rate of surface recession of 16 mm y−1 on exposed peat faces was recorded; this differed between faces of different aspects, with the greatest recession on southwest faces. Eroding peat surfaces exhibited maximum recession during the summer, but the peat surface sediment trap indicated that the highest rates of sediment loss from peat faces due to rain wash occurred during the autumn and early winter. Stream sediment sampling showed that the yield of organic sediment from the catchment was 34·4 t km−2 yr−1, with greatest losses also during the autumn and early winter. The evidence suggested that the surface recession, as measured on erosion pins, included a ‘wastage’ or shrinkage component, which possibly accounted for as much as 80 per cent of the apparent loss. Direct and circumstantial evidence suggested that peat wastage during the summer months was the most important agent of surface recession in the study period, which encompassed the two dry summers. Desiccation provided available sediment during the autumn, but organic sediment supply became limited as the winter progressed, despite the occurrence of frost heave.

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