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  4. Seasonal Net Ecosystem Carbon Exchange of a Regenerating Cutaway Bog: How Long Does it Take to Restore the C-Sequestration Function?
 
research article

Seasonal Net Ecosystem Carbon Exchange of a Regenerating Cutaway Bog: How Long Does it Take to Restore the C-Sequestration Function?

Samaritani, Emanuela
•
Siegenthaler, Andy  
•
Yli-Petays, Mika
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2011
Restoration Ecology

We measured the net ecosystem exchange (NEE) and respiration rates and modeled the photosynthesis and respiration dynamics in a cutover bog in the Swiss Jura Mountains during one growing season at three stages of regeneration (29, 42, and 51 years after peat cutting; coded sites A, B, and C) to determine if reestablishment of Sphagnum suffices to restore the C-sequestration function. From the younger to the older stage Sphagnum cover increased, while net primary Sphagnum production over the growing season decreased (139, 82, and, 67 g m(-2) y(-1) for A, B, and C respectively), and fen plant species were replaced by bog species. According to our NEE estimations, over the vegetation period site A was a net CO2-C source emitting 40 g CO2-C/m(2) while sites B and C were accumulating CO2-C, on average 222 and 209 g CO2-C/m(2), respectively. These differences are due to the higher respiration in site A during the summer, suggesting that early regeneration stages may be more sensitive to a warmer climate. Methane fluxes increased from site A to C in parallel with Eriophorum vaginatum cover and vascular plant leaf area. Our results show that reestablishing a Sphagnum cover is not sufficient to restore a CO2-sequestrating function but that after circa 50 years the ecosystem may naturally regain this function over the growing season.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1111/j.1526-100X.2010.00662.x
Web of Science ID

WOS:000292205800008

Author(s)
Samaritani, Emanuela
Siegenthaler, Andy  
Yli-Petays, Mika
Buttler, Alexandre  
Christin, Pascal-Antoine
Mitchell, Edward A. D.
Date Issued

2011

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell

Published in
Restoration Ecology
Volume

19

Start page

480

End page

489

Subjects

carbon sequestration

•

cutover bog

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peatland restoration

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photosynthesis

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respiration

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secondary succession

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Cut-Away Peatland

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Methane Emissions

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Eriophorum-Vaginatum

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Northern Peatland

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Atmospheric Co2

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Increased N

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Sphagnum

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Growth

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Balance

•

Canada

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
ECOS  
Available on Infoscience
August 24, 2011
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/70237
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