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Sphagnum farming on cut-over bog in NW Germany: Long-term studies on Sphagnum growthdownloads: 1834 | type: pdf | size: 3 MB

Volume 20 Special Volume: Growing Sphagnum (2017) Article 4

Sphagnum farming on cut-over bog in NW Germany: Long-term studies on Sphagnum growth

by G. Gaudig, M. Krebs and H. Joosten

Published online: 14.05.2017

Summary

Sphagnum farming allows sustainable and climate-friendly land use on bogs while producing a renewable substitute for peat in horticultural growing media. We studied Sphagnum productivity on an experimental Sphagnum culture established on a cut-over bog in Germany with strongly humified peat at the surface. Preparation of the site included levelling of the peat surface, construction of an irrigation system, spreading of Sphagnum papillosum fragments, covering them with straw, and finally rewetting. Provided there was an adequate (95 %) initial cover of Sphagnum fragments, the most relevant variables for Sphagnum productivity were found to be water supply and regular mowing of vascular plants. As long as sufficient water was supplied, the dry biomass accumulation of the established Sphagnum lawn remained high, reaching 3.7 t ha-1 yr-1 between 2007 and 2011. Annual dry Sphagnum biomass productivity over the period 2010–2011 was up to 6.9 t ha-1. During periods when high water table could not be maintained, substantial decomposition of the previously accumulated biomass occurred. After nine years the net accumulated dry mass per hectare was on average 19.5 t of pure Sphagnum and 0.7 t of subsurface vascular-plant biomass. Nitrogen deposition in the study region is apparently sufficient to support fast Sphagnum growth, whereas phosphorus and potassium may be limiting.

Citation

Gaudig, G., Krebs, M. & Joosten, H. (2017): Sphagnum farming on cut-over bog in NW Germany: Long-term studies on Sphagnum growth. Mires and Peat, 20(4), 1-19. (Online: http://www.mires-and-peat.net/pages/volumes/map20/map2004.php); 10.19189/MaP.2016.OMB.238

Reviewers

IMCG and IPS acknowledge the work of the reviewers.

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