Peatlands have been drained for land use for a long time and on a large scale, turning them from carbon and nutrient sinks into respective sources, diminishing water regulation capacity, causing surface height loss and destroying biodiversity. Over the last decades, drained peatlands have been rewetted for biodiversity restoration and, as it strongly decreases greenhouse gas emissions, also for climate protection. We quantify restoration success by comparing 320 rewetted fen peatland sites to 243 near-natural peatland sites of similar origin across temperate Europe, all set into perspective by 10k additional European fen vegetation plots. Results imply that rewetting of drained fen peatlands induces the establishment of tall, graminoid wetland plants (helophytisation) and long-lasting differences to pre-drainage biodiversity (vegetation), ecosystem functioning (geochemistry, hydrology), and land cover characteristics (spectral temporal metrics). The Paris Agreement entails the rewetting of 500,000 km of drained peatlands worldwide until 2050-2070. A better understanding of the resulting locally novel ecosystems is required to improve planning and implementation of peatland rewetting and subsequent management.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-25619-y | DOI Listing |
Sci Total Environ
August 2024
Department of Bacterial Physiology, Institute of Microbiology, 17489 Greifswald, Germany. Electronic address:
The rewetting of formerly drained peatlands can help to counteract climate change through the reduction of CO emissions. However, this can lead to resuming CH emissions due to changes in the microbiome, favoring CH-producing archaea. How plants, hydrology and microbiomes interact as ultimate determinants of CH dynamics is still poorly understood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFZhonghua Nan Ke Xue
July 2023
Department of Andrology, Xiyuan Hospital of China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences, Beijing 100091, China.
Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia, as a common disease in the male urinary system, has traditionally been considered to have the basic pathogenesis of kidney deficiency and blood stasis. However, this disease involves many pathological factors such as "damp-heat", leading to confusion and difficulty in resolving the condition. "Fen Xiao Zou Xie" is an important treatment method used by Ye Tianshi to address damp-heat patterns and is now widely applied in the diagnosis and treatment of urinary system diseases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFYing Yong Sheng Tai Xue Bao
January 2024
State Key Laboratory of Vegetation and Environmental Change, Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100093, China.
Wetlands store one third of global soil organic carbon (SOC) and are strongly affected by artificial drainage. The impact of drainage-induced water-table decline on carbon cycling in different wetlands, particularly microbial transformation processes, remains unclear. To address this knowledge gap, we collected soil samples from two typical wetlands of China (a nutrient-poor bog located in Dajiuhu and a nutrient-rich fen in Hongyuan) and conducted an incubation experiment with the addition of C-labeled glucose to analyze the effects of short- and long-term drainage on SOC decomposition, extracellular enzyme activity, microbial carbon use efficiency (CUE), and microbial carbon accumulation efficiency (CAE).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInsects
October 2023
Department of Zoology and Nature Protection, Maria Curie-Skłodowska University, Akademicka 19, 20-033 Lublin, Poland.
The caddisflies (Trichoptera) of calcareous fen habitats, in contrast to those of other peatland types, have been poorly researched. We thus conducted a two-year study in south-eastern Poland encompassing four types of such habitats-drained and undrained fens and water bodies (pools and ditches) located within the fens-in order to define trichopteran reference assemblages (PCoA), indicator species (IndVal analysis), and the drivers (both natural and those associated with landscape management, including area protection) responsible for caddisfly species distribution (CCA). The most important environmental driver was habitat persistence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
October 2023
University of Greifswald, Greifswald, Germany.
Paludiculture, the productive use of wet or rewetted peatlands, offers an option for continued land use by farmers after rewetting formerly drained peatlands, while reducing the greenhouse gas emissions from peat soils. Biodiversity conservation may benefit, but research on how biodiversity responds to paludiculture is scarce. We conducted a multi-taxon study investigating vegetation, breeding bird and arthropod diversity at six rewetted fen sites dominated by Carex or Typha species.
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