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Volume 20 Special Volume: Growing Sphagnum (2017/2018) go to top

Volume editors Stephan Glatzel and Line Rochefort

  • Article 0: Growing Sphagnum: Foreword
    by S. Glatzel and L. Rochefort  Published online: 20.04.2017
  • Article 1: Swift recovery of Sphagnum carpet and carbon sequestration after shallow Sphagnum biomass harvesting
    by N. Silvan, K. Jokinen, J. Näkkilä and R. Tahvonen  Published online: 20.04.2017
  • Article 2: Greenhouse gas balance of an establishing Sphagnum culture on a former bog grassland in Germany
    by A. Günther, G. Jurasinski, K. Albrecht, G. Gaudig, M. Krebs and S. Glatzel  Published online: 20.04.2017
  • Article 3: Establishing Sphagnum cultures on bog grassland, cut-over bogs, and floating mats: procedures, costs and area potential in Germany
    by S. Wichmann, A. Prager and G. Gaudig  Published online: 20.04.2017
  • 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
  • Article 5: The effects of water management on the CO2 uptake of Sphagnum moss in a reclaimed peatland
    by C.M. Brown, M. Strack and J.S. Price  Published online: 03.07.2017
  • Article 6: Effect of repeated mowing to reduce graminoid plant cover on the moss carpet at a Sphagnum farm in North America
    by M. Guêné-Nanchen, R. Pouliot, S. Hugron and L. Rochefort  Published online: 11.09.2017
  • Article 7: Sphagnum moss as a growing media constituent: some effects of harvesting, processing and storage
    by S. Kumar  Published online: 18.09.2017
  • Article 8: Sphagnum growth in floating cultures: Effect of planting design
    by Y. Hoshi Published online: 19.11.2017
  • Article 9: Sphagnum restoration on degraded blanket and raised bogs in the UK using micropropagated source material: a review of progress
    by S.J.M Caporn, A.E. Rosenburgh, A.T. Keightley, S.L. Hinde, J.L. Riggs, M. Buckler and N.A. Wright Published online: 11.05.2018
  • Article 10: The water balance of a Sphagnum farming site in north-west Germany
    by K. Brust, M. Krebs, A. Wahren, G. Gaudig and H. Joosten Published online: 16.07.2018
  • Article 11: Sphagnum mosses cultivated in outdoor nurseries yield efficient plant material for peatland restoration
    by S. Hugron and L. Rochefort Published online: 05.08.2018
  • Article 12: Sphagnum regrowth after cutting
    by M. Krebs, G. Gaudig, I. Matchutadze and H. Joosten Published online: 15.08.2018
  • Article 13: Sphagnum farming from species selection to the production of growing media: a review
    by G. Gaudig, M. Krebs, A. Prager, S. Wichmann and 30 others Published online: 28.08.2018

Reviewers

IMCG and IPS acknowledge the work of the reviewers.

 

Volume 19 (2017) go to top

  • Article 1: Towards ecosystem-based restoration of peatland biodiversity.
    by T.Yu. Minayeva, O.M. Bragg and A.A. Sirin  Published online: 18.01.2017
  • Article 2: Characterisation of Holocene plant macrofossils from North Spanish ombrotrophic mires: bryophytes.
    by M. Souto, D. Castro, X. Pontevedra-Pombal, E. Garcia-Rodeja and M.I. Fraga  Published online: 18.01.2017
  • Article 3: Quality loss of Swiss bog vegetation - the key importance of the margins.
    by E. Feldmeyer-Christe and M. Küchler  Published online: 18.01.2017
  • Article 4: Biosorption of hexavalent chromium from aqueous solutions using highly characterised peats.
    by A.M. Rizzuti, C.R. Newkirk, K.A. Wilson, L.W. Cosme and A.D. Cohen  Published online: 08.02.2017
  • Article 5: Consolidation of gyttja in a rewetted fen peatland: Potential implications for restoration.
    by S. Malloy and J.S. Price  Published online: 08.02.2017
  • Article 6: Ten-year results of a comparison of methods for restoring afforested blanket bog.
    by R. Anderson and A. Peace  Published online: 26.02.2017
  • Article 7: Holocene elemental, lead isotope and charcoal record from peat in southern Poland.
    by K. Tudyka, A. Pazdur, F. De Vleeschouwer, M. LityÅ„ska-ZajÄ…c, L. Chróst and N. Fagel  Published online: 05.03.2017
  • Article 8: Drivers of peat accumulation rate in a raised bog: impact of drainage, climate, and local vegetation composition.
    by N. Stivrins, I. Ozola, M. GaÅ‚ka, E. Kuske, T. Alliksaar, T.J. Andersen, M. Lamentowicz, S. Wulf and T. Reitalu  Published online: 21.03.2017
  • Article 9: Using ‘snapshot’ measurements of CH4 fluxes from an ombrotrophic peatland to estimate annual budgets: interpolation versus modelling.
    by S.M. Green and A.J. Baird  Published online: 21.03.2017
  • Article 10: Diversity and species composition of beetles in the herb-shrub layer of a large isolated raised bog in Belarus.
    by G.G. Sushko  Published online: 05.05.2017
  • Article 11: From meadow to shallow lake: Monitoring secondary succession in a coastal fen after rewetting by flooding based on aerial imagery and plot data.
    by M. Koch, F. Koebsch, J. Hahn and G. Jurasinski  Published online: 05.05.2017
  • Article 12: Questioning ten common assumptions about peatlands.
    by University of Leeds Peat Club: K.L. Bacon, A.J. Baird, A. Blundell, M-A. Bourgault, P.J. Chapman, G. Dargie, G.P. Dooling, C. Gee, J. Holden, T. Kelly, K.A. McKendrick-Smith, P.J. Morris, A. Noble, S.M. Palmer, A. Quillet, G.T. Swindles, E.J. Watson and D.M. Young  Published online: 16.07.2017
  • Article 13: Investigating the internal structure of four Azorean Sphagnum bogs using ground-penetrating radar.
    by D. Pereira, E. Dias and M. Ponte  Published online: 14.08.2017
  • Article 14: The history, present status and future prospects of the Russian fuel peat industry.
    by P.S. Tcvetkov  Published online: 14.08.2017
  • Article 15: Indicative effects of climate change on groundwater levels in Estonian raised bogs over 50 years.
    by E. Lode, M. Küttim and I.-K. Kiivit  Published online: 23.08.2017
  • Article 16: A video simulating the growth of a raised bog.
    by R.S. Clymo  Published online: 18.09.2017
  • Article 17: Disappearance rate of a peatland in Dublany near Lviv (Ukraine) drained in 19th century.
    by K. Lipka, E. ZajÄ…c, V. Hlotov and Z. Siejka  Published online: 18.09.2017
  • Article 18: Influence of pore structure on solute transport in degraded and undegraded fen peat soils.
    by C. Kleimeier, F. Rezanezhad, P. Van Cappellen and B. Lennartz  Published online: 06.10.2017
  • Article 19: Performance of extensive cattle stocking on a reclaimed minerotrophic wet grassland.
    by L. Breitsameter, M. Kayser, J. Strodthoff, J. Müller and J. Isselstein  Published online: 06.10.2017
  • Article 20: Carbon dioxide and methane fluxes in grazed and undisturbed mountain peatlands in the Ecuadorian Andes.
    by M.E. Sánchez, R.A. Chimner, J.A. Hribljan, E.A. Lilleskov and E. Suárez  Published online: 16.10.2017
  • Article 21: Iberian acid peatlands: types, origin and general trends of development.
    by X. Pontevedra-Pombal, D. Castro, R. Carballeira, M. Souto, J.A. López-Sáez, S. Pérez-Díaz, M.I. Fraga, M. Valcárcel and E. García-Rodeja  Published online: 22.10.2017
  • Article 22: The peatland map of Europe.
    by F. Tanneberger, C. Tegetmeyer, S. Busse, A. Barthelmes and 55 others  Published online: 10.11.2017
  • Article 23: Refining pedotransfer functions for estimating peat bulk density.
    by S.J. Chapman, J. Farmer, A. Main and J. Smith  Published online: 25.11.2017
  • Article 24: Assessment of the humification degree of peat soil under sago (Metroxylon sagu) cultivation based on Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR) and Ultraviolet-Visible (UV-Vis) spectroscopic characteristics.
    by S.F. Sim, M.E. Wasli, C.M.R. Yong, P.S. Howell, C. Jumin, N.A. Safie and B. Samling  Published online: 25.11.2017

Reviewers

IMCG and IPS acknowledge the work of the reviewers.

 

Volume 18 (2016) go to top

  • Article 1: Long-term peat accumulation in temperate forested peatlands (Thuja occidentalis swamps) in the Great Lakes region of North America.
    by C.A. Ott and R.A. Chimner  Published online: 28.02.2016
  • Article 2: Impact of drainage on vegetation of transitional mires in Estonia.
    by J. Paal, I. Jürjendal, A. Suija and A. Kull  Published online: 28.02.2016
  • Article 3: Geotechnical properties of peat soil stabilised with shredded waste tyre chips.
    by M.A. Rahgozar and M. Saberian  Published online: 28.02.2016
  • Article 4: Record growth of Sphagnum papillosum in Georgia (Transcaucasus): rain frequency, temperature and microhabitat as key drivers in natural bogs.
    by M. Krebs, G. Gaudig and H. Joosten  Published online: 28.02.2016
  • Article 5: Revegetation dynamics after 15 years of rewetting in two extracted peatlands in Sweden.
    by S.A. Kozlov, L. Lundin and N.A. Avetov  Published online: 28.02.2016
  • Article 6: Spontaneous revegetation of cutaway fens: can it result in valuable habitats?
    by A. Priede, A. Mežaka, L. Dobkeviča and L. GrÄ«nberga  Published online: 08.03.2016
  • Article 7: Loss of the soil carbon storage function of drained forested peatlands.
    by C. Wüst-Galley, E. Mössinger and J. Leifeld  Published online: 08.04.2016
  • Article 8: Informing innovative peatland conservation in light of palaeoecological evidence for the demise of Sphagnum imbricatum: the case of Oxenhope Moor, Yorkshire, UK.
    by J. McCarroll, F.M. Chambers, J.C. Webb and T. Thom  Published online: 11.04.2016
  • Article 9: Movement of tritiated water injected into blanket peat.
    by R.S. Clymo  Published online: 17.04.2016
  • Article 10: Ecohydrological analysis of a groundwater influenced blanket bog: occurrence of Schoenus nigricans in Roundstone Bog, Connemara, Ireland.
    by A.P. Grootjans, G. Hensgens, R. Hogenboom, B. Aarts, J. Manschot and J.G.M. Roelofs  Published online: 18.04.2016
  • Article 11: Characterisation of Holocene plant macrofossils from North Spanish ombrotrophic mires: vascular plants.
    by M. Souto, D. Castro, X. Pontevedra-Pombal, E. Garcia-Rodeja and M.I. Fraga  Published online: 10.06.2016
  • Article 12: Do testate amoebae communities recover in concordance with vegetation after restoration of drained peatlands?
    by E. Daza Secco, T. Haapalehto, J. Haimi, K. Meissner and T. Tahvanainen  Published online: 10.06.2016
  • Article 13: Palaeoecological studies as a source of peat depth data: A discussion and data compilation for Scotland.
    by J. Ratcliffe and R.J. Payne  Published online: 21.06.2016
  • Article 14: Concentrations, loads and yields of organic carbon from two tropical peat swamp forest streams in Riau Province, Sumatra, Indonesia.
    by H.M. Yupi, T. Inoue, J. Bathgate and R. Putra  Published online: 30.06.2016
  • Article 15: Area estimations of cultivated organic soils in Ireland: reducing GHG reporting uncertainties.
    by J. Donlan, J. O’Dwyer and K.A. Byrne  Published online: 30.06.2016
  • Article 16: Geotechnical properties of peat soil stabilised with shredded waste tyre chips in combination with gypsum, lime or cement.
    by M. Saberian and M.A. Rahgozar  Published online: 03.07.2016
  • Article 17: Reintroduction of salt marsh vegetation and phosphorus fertilisation improve plant colonisation on seawater-contaminated cutover bogs.
    by C. Emond, L. Lapointe, S. Hugron and L. Rochefort  Published online: 10.07.2016
  • Article 18: Biology, ecology, use, conservation and cultivation of round-leaved sundew (Drosera rotundifolia L.): a review.
    by B. Baranyai and H. Joosten  Published online: 09.09.2016
  • Article 19: The production of 7-methyljuglone, plumbagin and quercetin in wild and cultivated Drosera rotundifolia and Drosera intermedia.
    by B. Baranyai, C. Bäcker, C. Reich and U. Lindequist  Published online: 09.09.2016
  • Article 20: Combining short-term manipulative experiments with long-term palaeoecological investigations at high resolution to assess the response of Sphagnum peatlands to drought, fire and warming.
    by M. Lamentowicz, S. SÅ‚owiÅ„ska, M. SÅ‚owiÅ„ski, V.E.J. Jassey, B.H. Chojnicki, M.K. Reczuga, M. ZieliÅ„ska, K. Marcisz, Ł. Lamentowicz, J. Barabach, M. Samson, P. KoÅ‚aczek and A. Buttler  Published online: 26.09.2016
  • Article 21: The effect of long-term forestry drainage on the current state of peatland soils: A case study from the Central Sudetes, SW Poland.
    by B. Glina, A. Bogacz, M. Gulyás, B. Zawieja, P. Gajewski and Z. Kaczmarek  Published online: 09.10.2016
  • Article 22: Scientific basis of a new method for hydrophobic modification of mineral binders using peat products.
    by O. Misnikov  Published online: 14.10.2016
  • Article 23: Regional patterns and controlling factors in plant species composition and diversity in Canadian lowland coastal bogs and laggs.
    by S.A. Howie, H.J. van Meerveld and R.J. Hebda  Published online: 06.11.2016
  • Article 24: Genesis and abiotic characteristics of three high-altitude peatlands in the Tien Shan Mountains (Kyrgyzstan), with focus on silty peatland substrates.
    by R. Müller, T. Heinicke, O. Juschus and J. Zeitz  Published online: 06.11.2016
  • Article 25: Cold storage as a method for the long-term preservation of tropical dissolved organic carbon (DOC).
    by S. Cook, M. Peacock, C.D. Evans, S.E. Page, M. Whelan, V. Gauci and K.L. Khoon  Published online: 13.11.2016
  • Article 26: Holocene fire history: can evidence of peat burning be found in the palaeo-archive?
    by S.L. New, C.M. Belcher, V.A. Hudspith and A.V. Gallego-Sala  Published online: 06.12.2016

Reviewers

IMCG and IPS acknowledge the work of the reviewers.

 

Volume 17 Special Volume: Greenhouse Gas Fluxes in Degraded and Restored Peatlands: Global Perspectives (2016) go to top

Volume editors David Wilson and Stephan Glatzel

An overview of current knowledge about Greenhouse Gas (GHG) dynamics along a land use gradient from degraded to restored/rewetted peatlands. This volume was inspired by a session with the same title from the Society for Ecological Restoration (SER) 6th World Conference (Manchester, UK) in August 2015.

  • Article 1: Soil CO2 efflux in a degraded raised bog is regulated by water table depth rather than recent plant assimilate.
    by U.H. Kritzler, R.R.E. Artz and D. Johnson  Published online: 28.02.2016
  • Article 2: High methane emissions from restored Norway spruce swamps in southern Finland over one growing season.
    by M. Koskinen, L. Maanavilja, M. Nieminen, K. Minkkinen and E.-S. Tuittila  Published online: 28.02.2016
  • Article 3: Summertime greenhouse gas fluxes from an urban bog undergoing restoration through rewetting.
    by A. Christen, R.S. Jassal, T.A. Black, N.J. Grant, I. Hawthorne, M.S. Johnson, S. C. Lee and M. Merkens  Published online: 08.04.2016
  • Article 4: Greenhouse gas emission factors associated with rewetting of organic soils.
    by D. Wilson, D. Blain, J. Couwenberg, C.D. Evans, D. Murdiyarso, S.E. Page, F. Renou-Wilson, J.O. Rieley, A. Sirin, M. Strack and E.-S. Tuittila  Published online: 08.04.2016
  • Article 5: Controls on plot-scale growing season CO2 and CH4 fluxes in restored peatlands: Do they differ from unrestored and natural sites?
    by M. Strack, J. Cagampan, G. Hassanpour Fard, A.M. Keith, K. Nugent, T. Rankin, C. Robinson, I.B. Strachan, J.M. Waddington and B. Xu  Published online: 14.06.2016
  • Article 6: Greenhouse gas dynamics in degraded and restored tropical peatlands.
    by J. Jauhiainen, S.E. Page and H. Vasander  Published online: 21.06.2016
  • Article 7: Ecosystem respiration, methane and nitrous oxide fluxes from ecotopes in a rewetted extracted peatland in Sweden.
    by S. Jordan, M. Strömgren, J. Fiedler, L. Lundin, E. Lode and T. Nilsson  Published online: 23.09.2016
  • Article 8: Surface peat and its dynamics following drainage - do they facilitate estimation of carbon losses with the C/ash method?
    by R. Laiho and M. Pearson  Published online: 04.12.2016

Reviewers

IMCG and IPS acknowledge the work of the reviewers.

 

Volume 16 (2015) go to top

  • Article 1: Everglades peats: using historical and recent data to estimate predrainage and current volumes, masses and carbon contents.
    by S.M. Hohner and T.W. Dreschel  Published online: 02.01.2015
  • Article 2: Biosorption of mercury from aqueous solutions using highly characterised peats.
    by A.M. Rizzuti, F.L. Ellis, L.W. Cosme and A.D. Cohen  Published online: 11.02.2015
  • Article 3: Characteristics of Eastern Canadian cultivated Sphagnum and potential use as a substitute for perlite and vermiculite in peat-based horticultural substrates.
    by M. Aubé, M. Quenum and L.L. Ranasinghe  Published online: 01.03.2015
  • Article 4: Effects of shading on relative competitive advantage of three species of Sphagnum.
    by J.Z. Ma, Z.J. Bu, X.X. Zheng, J.L. Ge and S.Z. Wang  Published online: 11.06.2015
  • Article 5: Why are there few gas bubbles in deep peat in British raised and blanket peat bogs?
    by R.S. Clymo  Published online: 28.07.2015
  • Article 6: The fungal consortium of Andromeda polifolia in bog habitats.
    by N.V. Filippova and M.N. Thormann  Published online: 28.09.2015
  • Article 7: Physical and chemical properties of two Iranian peat types.
    by M.A. Rahgozar and M. Saberian  Published online: 28.09.2015
  • Article 8: Physical and chemical properties of tropical peat under stabilised land uses.
    by M. Könönen, J. Jauhiainen, R. Laiho, K. Kusin and H. Vasander  Published online: 01.10.2015
  • Article 9: A mesocosm approach to study the response of Sphagnum peatlands to hydrological changes: setup, optimisation and performance.
    by M. Mulot, A. Villard, D. Varidel and E.A.D. Mitchell  Published online: 11.10.2015
  • Article 10: The history of the peat manufacturing industry in The Netherlands: Peat moss litter and active carbon.
    by M.A.W. Gerding, E.H.K. Karel and G.E. de Vries Published online: 06.11.2015
  • Article 11: Rapid changes in plant assemblages on mud-bottom hollows in raised bog: a sixteen-year study.
    by E. Karofeld, R. Rivis, H. Tõnisson and K. Vellak Published online: 12.11.2015
  • Article 12: Quantifying the water balance of Mfabeni Mire (iSimangaliso Wetland Park, South Africa) to understand its importance, functioning and vulnerability.
    by P. Grundling, A.D. Clulow, J.S. Price and C.S. Everson Published online: 18.12.2015
  • Article 13: Towards large-scale paludiculture: addressing the challenges of biomass harvesting in wet and rewetted peatlands.
    by C. Schröder, T. Dahms, J. Paulitz, W. Wichtmann and S. Wichmann Published online: 21.12.2015

Reviewers

IMCG and IPS acknowledge the work of the reviewers.

 

Volume 15 (2014 / 2015) Special Volume: Mountain Peatlands   go to top

Guest editors Antoine Cleef, Piet-Louis Grundling and Hans Joosten

  • Article 0: Mountain Peatlands. Foreword.
    by O.M. Bragg  Published online: 11.06.2015
  • Article 1: The effect of drainage on organic matter accumulation and plant communities of high-altitude peatlands in the Colombian tropical Andes.
    by J.C. Benavides  Published online: 29.04.2014
  • Article 2: A geographical model for the altitudinal zonation of mire types in the uplands of western Europe: the example of Les Monts du Forez in eastern France.
    by H. Cubizolle and G. Thebaud  Published online: 29.04.2014
  • Article 3: Peatlands of the Peruvian Puna ecoregion: types, characteristics and disturbance.
    by F. Salvador, J. Monerris and L. Rochefort  Published online: 14.05.2014
  • Article 4: Peatlands in the Toledo Mountains (central Spain): characterisation and conservation status.
    by J.A. López-Sáez, R. García-Río, F. Alba-Sánchez, E. García-Gómez and S. Pérez-Díaz Published online: 06.11.2014
  • Article 5: An introduction to the bofedales of the Peruvian High Andes.
    by M.S. Maldonado Fonkén Published online: 03.12.2014
  • Article 6: Enhanced sensitivity of a mountain bog to climate change as a delayed effect of road construction.
    by P. von Sengbusch Published online: 02.01.2015
  • Article 7: Fen mires with cushion plants in Bale Mountains, Ethiopia.
    by B.W. Dullo, A.P. Grootjans, J.G.M. Roelofs, A.F. Senbeta and C. Fritz Published online: 11.02.2015
  • Article 8: Fens of the Sierra Nevada, California, USA: patterns of distribution and vegetation.
    by E.C. Wolf and D.J. Cooper Published online: 30.04.2015
  • Article 9: Mires in the Maluti Mountains of Lesotho.
    by P.-L. Grundling, A. Linström, W. Fokkema and A.P. Grootjans Published online: 06.06.2015
  • Article 10: In search of spring mires in Namibia: the Waterberg area revisited.
    by A.P. Grootjans, A.J.M. Jansen, P.C. de Hullu, H. Joosten, A. Bootsma and P.-L. Grundling Published online: 31.07.2015
  • Article 11: Peatland carbon stores and fluxes in the Snowy Mountains, New South Wales, Australia.
    by G.S. Hope and R.A. Nanson  Published online: 13.09.2015
  • Article 12: Carbon storage and long-term rate of accumulation in high-altitude Andean peatlands of Bolivia
    by J.A. Hribljan, D.J. Cooper, J. Sueltenfuss, E.C. Wolf, K.A. Heckman, E.A. Lilleskov and R.A. Chimner Published online: 12.11.2015
  • Article 13: Peat in the mountains of New Guinea.
    by G.S. Hope Published online: 12.11.2015
  • Article 14: Relationships between aquatic invertebrates, water quality and vegetation in an Andean peatland system.
    by E. Oyague Passuni and M.S. Maldonado Fonkén Published online: 31.12.2015

Reviewers

IMCG and IPS acknowledge the work of the reviewers.

 

Volume 14 (2014) go to top

  • Article 1: Mires and mire types of Peninsula Mitre, Tierra del Fuego, Argentina.
    by A. Grootjans, R. Iturraspe, C. Fritz, A. Moen and H. Joosten  Published online: 31.01.2014
  • Article 2: An evaluation of peat loss from an Everglades tree island, Florida, USA.
    by S. Aich, S.M.L. Ewe, B. Gu and T.W. Dreschel  Published online: 18.03.2014
  • Article 3: Impact of the spatial resolution of soils data on climate reporting for organic soils using the example of Germany.
    by H. Fell, N. Roßkopf and J. Zeitz (Mires and Peat 14: Article 3)  Published online: 18.05.2014
  • Article 4: The exposure of British peatlands to nitrogen deposition, 1900–2030.
    by R.J. Payne Published online: 01.07.2014
  • Article 5: Testing peat humification analysis in an Australian context: identifying wet shifts in regional climate over the past 4000 years.
    by M.A. Burrows, J. Fenner and S.G. Haberle Published online: 03.08.2014
  • Article 6: Shallow inundation favours decomposition of Phragmites australis leaves in a near-natural temperate fen.
    by C. Völlm and F. Tanneberger Published online: 01.09.2014
  • Article 7: On the relations between water regime, mass accretion and formation of ombrotrophic conditions in Sphagnum mires.
    by N. Malmer Published online: 03.10.2014
  • Article 8: Communities of larger fungi of ombrotrophic bogs in West Siberia.
    by N.V. Filippova and M.N. Thormann Published online: 06.11.2014

Reviewers

IMCG and IPS acknowledge the work of the reviewers.

 

Volume 13 Special Volume: Reed as a Renewable Resource and Other Aspects of Paludiculture (2013 / 2014) go to top

Guest editors W. Wichtmann and J. Couwenberg

  • Foreword 00: Reed as a Renewable Resource and Other Aspects of Paludiculture.
    by W. Wichtmann and J. Couwenberg Published online: 14.10.2013, updated 03.10.2014
  • Article 1: The utilisation of reed (Phragmites australis): a review.
    by J.F. Köbbing, N. Thevs and S. Zerbe Published online: 14.10.2013
  • Article 2: The effect of an exceptionally wet summer on methane effluxes from a 15-year re-wetted fen in north-east Germany.
    by V. Huth, A. Günther, G. Jurasinski and S. Glatzel Published online: 14.10.2013
  • Article 3: Regulation of reed (Phragmites australis) by water buffalo grazing: use in coastal conservation.
    by W. Sweers, S. Horn, G. Grenzdörffer and J. Müller Published online: 15.10.2013
  • Article 4: Reed as a gasification fuel: a comparison with woody fuels.
    by S. Link, Ü. Kask, A. Paist, A. Siirde, S. Arvelakis, M. Hupa, P. Yrjas and I. Külaots Published online: 19.10.2013
  • Article 5: Combustion characteristics of reed and its suitability as a boiler fuel.
    by Ü. Kask, L. Kask and S. Link Published online: 24.11.2013
  • Article 6: Combustibility of biomass from wet fens in Belarus and its potential as a substitute for peat in fuel briquettes.
    by W. Wichtmann, C. Oehmke, S. Bärisch, F. Deschan, U. Malashevich and F. Tanneberger Published online: 28.01.2014
  • Article 7: Thermal transmittance of reed-insulated walls in a purpose-built test house.
    by M. Miljan, M.-J. Miljan, J. Miljan, K. Akermann and K. Karja Published online: 28.02.2014
  • Article 8: Sphagnum farming in Germany – a review of progress.
    by G. Gaudig, F. Fengler, M. Krebs, A. Prager, J. Schulz, S. Wichmann and H. Joosten Published online: 28.02.2014
  • Article 9: The potential role of cattail-reinforced clay plaster in sustainable building.
    by G. Georgiev, W. Theuerkorn, M. Krus, R. Kilian and T. Grosskinsky Published online: 01.06.2014
  • Article 10: Saving reed lands by giving economic value to reed.
    by F.W. Croon Published online: 01.07.2014
  • Article 11: Developing new-generation machinery for vegetation management on protected wetlands in Poland.
    by A.P. Dubowski, K. Zembrowski, A. Rakowicz, T. Pawlowski, S. Weymann and L. Wojnilowicz Published online: 03.08.2014
  • Article 12: An exploration of common reed (Phragmites australis) bioenergy potential in North America.
    by R. Vaičekonytė, E. Kiviat, F. Nsenga and A. Ostfeld Published online: 03.10.2014

Reviewers

IMCG and IPS acknowledge the work of the reviewers.

 

Volume 12 (2013) go to top

  • Article 1: Towards robust subsidence-based soil carbon emission factors for peat soils in south-east Asia, with special reference to oil palm plantations.
    by J. Couwenberg and A. Hooijer Published online: 18.04.2013
  • Article 2: Modelling the effects of climate change and disturbance on permafrost stability in northern organic soils.
    by C.C. Treat, D. Wisser, S. Marchenko and S. Frolking Published online: 18.04.2013
  • Article 3: Mires and Histosols in French Guiana (South America): new data relating to location and area.
    by H. Cubizolle, M. Mayindza Mouandza and F. Muller Published online: 04.05.2013
  • Article 4: The hydrological and geochemical isolation of a freshwater bog within a saline fen in north-eastern Alberta.
    by S.J. Scarlett and J.S. Price Published online: 03.10.2013

Reviewers

IMCG and IPS acknowledge the work of the reviewers.

 

Volume 11 Special Volume: Peatlands In Balance: a Taster of the 14th International Peat Congress (2013) go to top

Guest editors S. Sarkkola and I.-M. Gren

  • Foreword 00: Foreword.
    by J. Rieley Published online: 18.04.2013
  • Article 1: Rewetted industrial cutaway peatlands in western Ireland: a prime location for climate change mitigation?
    by D. Wilson, C. Farrell, C. Mueller, S. Hepp and F. Renou-Wilson Published online: 18.04.2013
  • Article 2: Domination of growing-season evapotranspiration over runoff makes ditch network maintenance in mature peatland forests questionable.
    by S. Sarkkola, M. Nieminen, H. Koivusalo, A. Laurén, E. Ahti, S. Launiainen, E. Nikinmaa, H. Marttila, J. Laine and H. Hökkä Published online: 18.04.2013
  • Article 3: Development of an innovative peat lipstick based on the UV-B protective effect of humic substances.
    by R. Klöcking, Y. Felber, M. Guhr, G. Meyer, R. Schubert and J.I. Schoenherr Published online: 24.04.2013
  • Article 4: Sensitivity of carbon gas fluxes to weather variability on pristine, drained and rewetted temperate bogs.
    by Z. Urbanová, T. Picek and E.-S. Tuittila Published online: 17.05.2013
  • Article 5: The ability of contrasting ericaceous ecosystems to buffer nitrogen leaching.
    by C.D. Field, L.J. Sheppard, S.J.M. Caporn and N.B. Dise Published online: 26.08.2013
  • Article 6: Subsidence and soil CO2 efflux in tropical peatland in southern Thailand under various water table and management conditions.
    by T. Nagano, K. Osawa, T. Ishida, K. Sakai, P. Vijarnsorn, A. Jongskul, S. Phetsuk, S. Waijaroen, T. Yamanoshita, M. Norisada and K. Kojima Published online: 21.12.2013

Reviewers

IMCG and IPS acknowledge the work of the reviewers.

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