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Over thousands of years, peatlands around the world have accumulated carbon (C) stocks of global importance. Drainage for agriculture, forestry and peat extraction has transformed many peatlands from long-term sinks into strong sources of carbon dioxide (CO2). Peat extraction is worldwide responsible for about ten percent of drained peatlands and is mainly carried out in northern countries and Eastern Europe. In Belarus, 0.3 Mha of peatlands are drained for peat extraction, which is twelve percent of the country's peatland area. From 2006 to 2013, 21,333 ha of this area have been rewetted to protect these peatlands from fire and further degradation, reduce their greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, turn them back into C sinks and promote biodiversity. A further 260,000 ha are no longer used for peat extraction and their rewetting would be a great benefit for nature conservation and climate protection.
Rewetting of abandoned peat extraction areas usually leads to inundation of large areas where not adapted plants die and new species establish, depending on water level and nutrient conditions. Beavers, of which there are many in Belarus, also play an important role in the rewetting of peatlands. They dam up ditches in drained and rewetted peatlands, thus contributing to water level increases and vegetation changes. The aim of this PhD thesis was to investigate the impact of inundation on vegetation and GHG emissions in formerly extracted fens in Belarus, to determine the role of water level in this process, and to study whether such fens develop back into C sinks with an almost neutral GHG balance within one or two decades after rewetting (Papers II and III). Also the potential of beaver activities for peatland restoration was assessed (Paper III).
Two very different fens, rewetted after peat extraction, were chosen as study areas. The first one, Giel'cykaŭ Kašyl, is a former flood mire and was rewetted with water from the Jasiel'da River in 1985. During the study period 2010–2012 this site was a shallow lake (~ 1 m deep) dominated by very productive, tall reed. Shallower areas along the edges had a partly floating vegetation cover of cattail (Typha latifolia, T. angustifolia) and sedges (Carex elata, C. vesicaria). The second fen, Barcianicha, is fed by groundwater. Rewetting from 1995 onwards resulted in water levels at or slightly above surface and a lower nutrient availability compared to Giel'cykaŭ Kašyl'. This was reflected in the establishment of mesotrophic communities of Eriophorum angustifolium and Carex rostrata. Phragmites australis stands, which were also dominant here, were shorter and less productive than in Giel'cykaŭ Kašyl'. The southern area of Barcianicha was not used for peat extraction and has not been rewetted. Until 2009 vegetation of this part was characterized by forbs (Urtica dioica) and wet meadows (Agrostis stolonifera). From autumn 2009, a beaver dam in the main drainage ditch caused flooding of these areas and led to diverging vegetation development depending on water levels.
Within the framework of this doctoral thesis annual fluxes of CO2, methane (CH4) and nitrous oxide (N2O) and the development of water levels and vegetation were monitored for two years at nine sites and evaluated (Papers II and III). Three of the sites, respectively, were located (a) in Giel’cykaŭ Kašyl’, flooded in 1985, (b) in the central area of Barcianicha, which was rewetted in 1995, and (c) in the southern part of Barcianicha, which was flooded by beavers end of 2009. GHG measurements were carried out with manual chambers from August 2010 to September 2012. Annual net CO2 exchange rates (NEE) were modeled based on light response curves of gross primary production (GPP) and on temperature response curves of ecosystem respiration (Reco), which were determined every third to fourth week by alternating measurements with transparent (cooled) and opaque chambers (both with fan) along the daily amplitude of photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) and temperature. Annual CH4 emissions were calculated mainly based on the temperature response of CH4 fluxes over the course of the year, based on biweekly (in summer) to monthly (in winter) repeated single measurements with opaque chambers (without fan). This was done, although all longer rewetted sites were dominated by aerenchymatic plants whose gas transport during the vegetation period may change over the course of the day and can be influenced by shading. This might apply to the six longer rewetted sites, two of which were dominated by Phragmites australis, and the others by Typha latifolia, Carex elata, Carex rostrata or Eriophorum angustifolium. For these six sites therefore studies on the daily course of CH4 release and the influence of chamber shade were conducted, covering 8–24 hours and lasting at least from sunrise to afternoon. Also the extent to which flux rates were affected by a lack of chamber headspace mixing by fans was investigated in the mentioned studies (Papers I and II).
The daytime course of CH4 emissions showed a pronounced dynamic for Phragmites australis in both fens, with minimum release during the night and maximum during the day (Paper I). The other sites in contrast did not show a significant diurnal CH4 flux dynamic (Paper II). Lack of headspace mixing by fans as compared to chambers with fan resulted in a slight underestimation of CH4 emissions at very high chambers (220 and 250 cm), as used for Phragmites australis in Giel'cykaŭ Kašyl', while there was no difference at lower chambers (≤185 cm), as used for the other sites. Opaque chambers resulted for sites dominated by Typha latifolia and Carex elata in significantly (1.2 times and 1.1 times, respectively) lower CH4 fluxes compared to transparent chambers. For the other sites, opaque chambers did not significantly reduce CH4 emissions. This result was unexpected, especially for Phragmites australis, as PAR out of all parameters tested had the strongest influence on CH4 emissions from both reed sites, and clouds directly led to reduction of their emissions. Presumably the gas flow in the reed shoots located within opaque chambers was maintained by shoots outside the chamber that were connected to the enclosed shoots by rhizomes (Paper I). The investigations showed that single measurements between 9 a.m. and 6 p.m. with opaque chambers without fan, as performed for the determination of annual CH4 fluxes, resulted for Carex rostrata and Eriophorum angustifolium in estimates similar to the daily mean, but for Phragmites australis in estimates that were rather above the daily mean. Annual CH4 fluxes from Phragmites australis could therefore be slightly overestimated. CH4 fluxes from Typha latifolia and Carex elata during the vegetation period were corrected by a factor of 1.2, although darkness inside of opaque chambers matters only at day, not at night. Daily and annual CH4 fluxes from these sites have been therefore most likely slightly overestimated, too.
Water saturation and the establishment of adapted vegetation were the most important conditions for the restoration of C sinks (gaseous CO2 and CH4 fluxes) in the investigated peatlands. The only site with falling water levels in summer and thus temporarily aerated peat was the beaver flooded forbs (Urtica dioica) site at Barcianicha. This site was a very strong CO2 emitter and the only significant N2O source of the entire study (Paper III). All other sites were permanently wet, had much lower CO2 emissions or were even net C sinks (Papers II and III). Establishment of adapted vegetation depended on inundation depth and time since rewetting. For example, within one year the meadow site in Barcianicha shallowly flooded by beaver was colonized by Carex rostrata and other adapted helophytes and developed into a CO2 sink, while the deeper flooded site at the same meadow initially attracted only Chara and some individuals of Alisma plantago aquatica and remained a moderate CO2 source. However, the results of the longer rewetted sites show, that also deeply (~ 1 m) flooded fen areas can become densely populated with mire plants in the course of 25 years and develop into net C sinks. Highest annual C uptake in both fens was achieved by the reed sites. Eriophorum angustifolium and Carex rostrata in mesotrophic Barcianicha were smaller C sinks. Typha latifolia and Carex elata in the eutrophic Giel'cykaŭ Kašyl', on the other hand, released CO2, presumably because the high and fluctuating water levels imposed stress to the plants, and because the large supply of nutrients and dead plant material allowed for strong heterotrophic respiration (Paper II). The simultaneously high CH4 emissions made Typha latifolia and Carex elata major sources of GHG. CH4 emissions from Phragmites australis in Giel'cykaŭ Kašyl' were even higher, but due to extremely high CO2 uptake the site was only a small net GHG source. CH4 emissions in Barcianicha were much lower and comparable to undisturbed sedge fens. The difference between Giel'cykaŭ Kašyl' and Barcianicha was mainly due to the different nutrient supply and the related productivity of the plants. Important conclusions are that stable inundation is an appropriate measure for restoration of the C sink of formerly extracted fens, but nutrient input with water needs to be stopped or reduced in order to decrease CH4 production. If this is not possible, establishment of Phragmites australis and other strong C sinks could help to compensate for the climate impact of high CH4 emissions from eutrophic sites.
The effect of the beaver dam on the development of the southern part of Barcianicha depended not only on the initial situation but mainly on the water level. Under optimal conditions, it led to the rapid establishment of adapted mire plants, the restoration of a C sink and a significant reduction of GHG emissions. However, this situation in the shallowly flooded meadow was achieved by chance. In comparison to planned rewetting measures, which aim to raise the water level evenly over the entire peatland, beavers dam ditches in order to improve their immediate habitat, thus influencing water levels only up to a certain distance, but rarely over the entire peatland. Nevertheless, beaver activity is of high value both for mire conservation projects, where existing dams are supplemented by beaver dams, and for abandoned, drained peatlands, like former peat extraction areas in Belarus, many of which at least partially have been rewetted by beavers.