Organic matter accumulation in a restored peatland: Evaluating restoration success
2010
Abstract Recent advances in peatland restoration techniques have succeeded in establishing Sphagnum moss on the remnant cutover peat surface following peat extraction; however, evaluating restoration success remains a key issue. We argue that a Sphagnum -dominated peatland can only be considered functionally ‘restored’ once organic matter accumulation has achieved a thickness where the mean water table position in a drought year does not extend into the underlying formerly cutover peat surface. Here we monitor the spatio-temporal development of organic matter accumulation in a new peat layer for the first 8 years following the restoration of a Quebec peatland and couple a simple acrotelm carbon accumulation model and ecohydrological model to assess peatland restoration success. We determined that organic matter accumulation increased from 2.3 ± 1.7 cm 4 years post-restoration to 13.6 ± 6.5 cm 8 years post-restoration. For comparison, at an adjacent non-restored section of the peatland organic matter accumulation was significantly lower ( p
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