Abstract

Globally, peatlands have been affected by drainage and peat extraction, with adverse effects on their functioning and services. To restore peat‐forming vegetation, drained bogs are being rewetted on a large scale. Although this practice results in higher groundwater levels, unfortunately it often creates deep lakes in parts where peat was extracted to greater depths than the surroundings. Revegetation of these deeper waters by peat mosses appears to be challenging due to strong abiotic feedbacks that keep these systems in an undesired bare state. In this study, we theoretically explore if a floating peat mat and an open human‐made bog lake can be considered two alternative stable states using a simple model, and experimentally test in the field whether stable states are present, and whether a state shift can be accomplished using floating biodegradable structures that mimic buoyant peat. We transplanted two peat moss species into these structures (pioneer sp. Sphagnum cuspidatum and later‐successional sp. S. palustre) with and without additional organic substrate. Our model suggests that these open human‐made bog lakes and floating peat mats can indeed be regarded as alternative stable states. Natural recovery by spontaneous peat moss growth, i.e., a state shift from open water to floating mats, is only possible when the water table is sufficiently shallow to avoid light limitation (<0.29 m at our site). Our experiment revealed that alternative stable states are present and that the floating structures facilitated the growth of pioneer S. cuspidatum and vascular plants. Organic substrate addition particularly facilitated vascular plant growth, which correlated to higher moss height. The structures remained too wet for the late‐successional species S. palustre. We conclude that open water and floating peat mats in human‐made bog lakes can be considered two alternative stable states, and that temporary floating establishment structures can induce a state shift from the open water state to peat‐forming vegetation state. These findings imply that for successful restoration, there is a clear water depth threshold to enable peat moss growth and there is no need for addition of large amounts of donor‐peat substrate. Correct species selection for restoration is crucial for success.

Highlights

  • Peatlands provide vital ecological and socioeconomic services at a global scale (Joosten and Clarke 2002)

  • Structures positively affected peat moss and vascular plant biomass in the unvegetated human-made lake (Fig. 4), and this effect was enhanced by the addition of organic material (OM)

  • Human-made bog lakes in many restored bog remnants in Europe and North America, originate from former peat extraction and subsequent rewetting. These waters are often largely without vegetation, most likely due to a combination of unfavorable abiotic conditions and establishment thresholds caused by a lack of positive feedbacks normally generated by the vegetation itself (Paffen and Roelofs 1991, Smolders et al 2002, 2003, Tomassen et al 2003b). We show how these bog lakes can display alternative stable state behavior between contrasting bare open water and vegetated floating mat states driven by light availability, which is in agreement with our hypothesis

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Summary

Methods

Many lakes in rewetted raised bogs have either been fully colonized by vegetation or persist for decades without any significant vegetation development (Smolders et al 2003, Patberg et al 2013). We constructed a minimal model that explores the basic nature of the terrestrialization process in a qualitative manner (Couwenberg and Joosten 2005, van der Heide et al 2007, 2010).

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