Abstract

In restored peatlands, recovery of carbon assimilation by peat-forming plants is a prerequisite for the recovery of ecosystem functioning. Restoration by rewetting may affect moss photosynthesis and respiration directly and/or through species successional turnover. To quantify the importance of the direct effects and the effects mediated by species change in boreal spruce swamp forests, we used a dual approach: (i) we measured successional changes in moss communities at 36 sites (nine undrained, nine drained, 18 rewetted) and (ii) photosynthetic properties of the dominant Sphagnum and feather mosses at nine of these sites (three undrained, three drained, three rewetted). Drainage and rewetting affected moss carbon assimilation mainly through species successional turnover. The species differed along a light-adaptation gradient, which separated shade-adapted feather mosses from Sphagnum mosses and Sphagnum girgensohnii from other Sphagna, and a productivity and moisture gradient, which separated Sphagnum riparium and Sphagnum girgensohnii from the less productive S. angustifolium, S. magellanicum and S. russowii. Undrained and drained sites harbored conservative, low-production species: hummock-Sphagna and feather mosses, respectively. Ditch creation and rewetting produced niches for species with opportunistic strategies and high carbon assimilation. The direct effects also caused higher photosynthetic productivity in ditches and in rewetted sites than in undrained and drained main sites.

Highlights

  • 15 million hectares of Sphagnum peatlands have been drained to enhance tree growth for forestry, mostly in northern Europe (Joosten and Clarke 2002)

  • Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd

  • S. girgensohnii coupled with S. russowii was favored by undrained conditions, but it was common in all habitats (Fig. 2)

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Summary

Introduction

15 million hectares of Sphagnum peatlands have been drained to enhance tree growth for forestry, mostly in northern Europe (Joosten and Clarke 2002). Drainage decreases Sphagnum cover (Laine et al 1995; Korpela 2004), leading to cessation of Sphagnum biomass accumulation and to a loss of many ecosystem services that Sphagnum provides [e.g., filtration of soluble organic matter and nutrients, carbon store function, and sustenance of species of conservation value (Zak et al 2011)]. Feather mosses, which have a lower ability to accumulate carbon than Sphagnum (Turetsky et al 2010), show an opposite pattern: their relative cover increases after drainage (Laine et al 1995; Korpela 2004).

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