Abstract

Although conservation of percolation mires is very important for the European biodiversity, our understanding of their functioning is still insufficient, as most of the studied sites are to some extent degraded. We present a study on the relationship between vegetation patterns, hydrochemical gradients and water level fluctuations carried out in the Rospuda valley (NE Poland), which was recently discovered for science as a uniquely preserved fully functioning percolation mire. Vegetation composition, mire water chemistry and water level dynamics were studied along five transects perpendicular to the valley. Eight major vegetation types were identified: brown moss-small and slender sedge fens, Sphagnum-small sedge fens, brown moss-tall sedge fens, tall sedge-reed fens, pine-birch fen woodlands and shrublands, spruce fen woodlands, inundated alder woodlands, alder spring fen woodlands. The seasonal dynamics of water table was revealed as the major factor explaining vegetation patterns. The studied chemical parameters were relatively homogeneous in the whole mire—there is a rather uniform type of mineral-rich nutrient-poor subsurface water all across the fen.

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