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Peatland degradation: The relationship between raised bog hydrology and normalized difference vegetation index

Ecohydrology, 2019
Peatlands are recognized as important landscape elements and their disturbance, followed by the loss of their ecohydrological functions, leads to falling water tables and degradation.
Rasa Šimanauskienė   +6 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Hydrological differences between bogs and bog-relicts and consequences for bog restoration

Hydrobiologia, 1993
The hydrology of bog relicts differs from that in undisturbed bogs. The surface layers of these relicts mostly consist of moderately to strongly humified, secondary weathered peat as a result of drainage and peat cutting. The hydrophysical properties of these layers cause relatively high groundwater level fluctuations.
openaire   +3 more sources

Variation in photosynthetic properties among bog plants

, 2016
Plant functional types (PFTs) are used to make generalizations in modeling how plants impact ecosystem functioning. In boreal bogs the number of plant species is small, but several PFTs are represented, namely sedges, deciduous and evergreen dwarf-shrubs,
A. Korrensalo   +4 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Body in the bog but no DNA

Nature, 1986
DNA from the body of Lindow Man had not survived the acid-aqueous-anaerobic conditions of burial ...
Margaret Hughes   +2 more
openaire   +3 more sources

A Bog Forest

Ecology, 1922
In a previous paper (4, I9I7) the writer has described forest succession in Puget Sound sphagnum bogs, and in other papers (4, I9I3; I9I4; I9I9) has listed the trees growing in various sphagnum bogs of the Puget Sound region and Alaska. All of these are comparatively early stages in bog succession.
openaire   +2 more sources

Back to the Bog

1988
My role in connection with the efficient rent-seeking model (Tullock 1980) is, I think, a rather ill-omened one. I began the discussion by inventing a model with an apparent paradox. The market does not clear even with free entry and competition. There have been a number of efforts to deal with this problem (Corcoran, 1984; I commented on it in the ...
openaire   +2 more sources

The Limits to Peat Bog Growth

, 1984
Not less than 2% of the Earth's land surface is peat-covered, so it is important to try to understand the dynamics of peat accumulation. Peat-forming systems (mires) accumulate peat because conditions within them impede the decay of the plant material ...
BY R. S. Clymo
semanticscholar   +1 more source

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