Spatial surface patterns of hummocks, hollows, ridges, and pools (microtopography) are common features of many northern peatlands and are particularly distinct within the vast peatlands of the Hudson Bay Lowland (HBL), Canada. Hypotheses and models describe how small-scale feedbacks among vegetation, hydrology, and nutrients cause spatial differences in peat accumulation that enable microforms and surface patterns to develop over time. Empirical tests of the predictions from theoretical models of these proposed feedback mechanisms are limited, particularly in large peatland complexes such as the HBL. We investigate feedbacks controlling peatland structure and function in an ombrogenous bog and a minerogenous fen in the HBL. Our sites repres...
Northern peatlands are a terrestrial carbon store, with an annual sink of 0.1 Pg C yr−1 and a total ...
Predictive understanding of northern peatland hydrology is a necessary precursor to understanding th...
Paleoecological studies indicate that peatland ecosystems may exhibit bistability. This would mean t...
Drier conditions caused by drainage for infrastructure development, or associated with global climat...
Patterned peatlands of cool-temperate and subarctic regions have alternating low ridges (strings) an...
Peatland surface patterning motivates studies that identify underlying structuring mechanisms. Theor...
The sloping flanks of peatlands are commonly patterned with non-random, contour-parallel stripes of ...
Spatial patterning of ecosystems can be explained by several mechanisms. One approach to disentangli...
Peatlands store 30% of global terrestrial organic carbon. At the Mer Bleue research site in southern...
1. The acrotelm-catotelm model of peatland hydrological and biogeochemical processes posits that the...
Predicting how gradual changes in abiotic conditions affect ecosystem functioning is a key challenge...
[1] Northern peatlands are significant stocks of terrestrial soil carbon, and it has been predicted ...
Northern peatlands contain close to one-third of the world’s soil carbon and changes to their ecolog...
The hummock-hollow classification framework used to categorize peatland ecosystem microtopography is...
1. Determining the plant traits that best predict carbon (C) storage is increasingly important as gl...
Northern peatlands are a terrestrial carbon store, with an annual sink of 0.1 Pg C yr−1 and a total ...
Predictive understanding of northern peatland hydrology is a necessary precursor to understanding th...
Paleoecological studies indicate that peatland ecosystems may exhibit bistability. This would mean t...
Drier conditions caused by drainage for infrastructure development, or associated with global climat...
Patterned peatlands of cool-temperate and subarctic regions have alternating low ridges (strings) an...
Peatland surface patterning motivates studies that identify underlying structuring mechanisms. Theor...
The sloping flanks of peatlands are commonly patterned with non-random, contour-parallel stripes of ...
Spatial patterning of ecosystems can be explained by several mechanisms. One approach to disentangli...
Peatlands store 30% of global terrestrial organic carbon. At the Mer Bleue research site in southern...
1. The acrotelm-catotelm model of peatland hydrological and biogeochemical processes posits that the...
Predicting how gradual changes in abiotic conditions affect ecosystem functioning is a key challenge...
[1] Northern peatlands are significant stocks of terrestrial soil carbon, and it has been predicted ...
Northern peatlands contain close to one-third of the world’s soil carbon and changes to their ecolog...
The hummock-hollow classification framework used to categorize peatland ecosystem microtopography is...
1. Determining the plant traits that best predict carbon (C) storage is increasingly important as gl...
Northern peatlands are a terrestrial carbon store, with an annual sink of 0.1 Pg C yr−1 and a total ...
Predictive understanding of northern peatland hydrology is a necessary precursor to understanding th...
Paleoecological studies indicate that peatland ecosystems may exhibit bistability. This would mean t...