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Journal ArticleDOI

Chemical aspects of the ecology of some south German peatlands

G. J. Waughman
- 01 Nov 1980 - 
- Vol. 68, Iss: 3, pp 1025-1046
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TLDR
The gradient from poor fen to bog is most closely mirrored by the decline in concentration of K in the standing crop, which is a widespread feature in natural peatlands.
Abstract
(1) The concentration of inorganic constituLents of mire vegetation and the underlying peat at fifty sites in southern Germany is related to the fen-bog vegetation gradient. (2) The concentration of soluble NH'-N was lowest in peat from fens and greatest in peat from bogs. The trend for soluble NO--N in peat was the reverse. (3) The lowest concentration of P04-P in vegetation was in bogs, but in peat from these same sites the concentration of easily soluble P04-P was greatest. This is a widespread feature in natural peatlands. (4) Concentration of total Ca, Mg, and K was greatest in peat and vegetation from fens, and lowest in bogs. The concentration of exchangeable Ca and Mg in peat reflected that of total concentration, except that exchangeable K had a reverse trend with the highest concentration in bog peat. (5) The concentration in vegetation of all heavy metals except Zn and Cu was highest in plants from bogs. (6) The Ca/Mg quotient in ombrotrophic peat ranged from 1-8-5 2. The highest value was in the mire complex receiving the greatest precipitation. (7) The gradient from poor fen to bog is most closely mirrored by the decline in concentration of K in the standing crop.

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Citations
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How Sphagnum bogs down other plants.

TL;DR: Sphinxagnum is an effective ecosystem engineer and at the same time benefit the plant in the short term as discussed by the authors, and its morphology, anatomy, physiology and composition make it an effective environment engineer.
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Biogeography and Dispersal of Micro-organisms: A Review Emphasizing Protists

TL;DR: This review summarizes data on the biogeography and dispersal of bacteria, microfungi and selected protists, such as dinoflagellates, chrysophytes, testate amoebae, and ciliates and introduces the restricted distribution and disperseal of mosses, ferns and macrofunga as arguments into the discussion on the postulated cosmopolitism and ubiquity of protists.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ecological gradients, subdivisions and terminology of north‐west European mires

TL;DR: A review of mire ecology and terminology can be found in this paper in relation to evolving concepts and perceptions, and the diverse schools and traditions of vegetation and habitat description and research.
Journal ArticleDOI

Carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus mineralization in northern wetlands

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined rates of C, N, and P mineralization in soils from 16 northern Minnesota wetlands that occur across an ombrotrophic-minerotrophic gradient.
Journal ArticleDOI

The relationships of vegetation to surface water chemistry and peat chemistry in fens of Alberta, Canada

TL;DR: The relationship between vegetation components, surface water chemistry and peat chemistry from 23 fens in boreal Alberta, Canada, substantiate important differences along the poor to rich fen gradient as mentioned in this paper.
References
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Book

The Moss Flora of Britain and Ireland

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a taxonomy of the genera Sphagnopsida, Andreaeopsida and Bryopsida for the Addundum Index, including the Artificial keys of genera.
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