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Effects of nutrient loadings from catchments on Asajino mire, a small coastal ombrotrophic mire in northernmost Japan
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The relationship between water chemistry and vegetation was studied in a coastal ombrotrophic mire in northern Hokkaido, Japan. The distributions of
Sphagnum
and
Phragmites
communities were separated clearly by the pH and ion concentration of the peat surface‐pore water. The drainage ditches along the road across the center of the mire had a high pH and ion concentration, as did the peat water in the western part of the mire. It was found that fields used for livestock farming on a hill to the west of the mire leached materials into the mire through drainage ditches, surface runoff, and probably also through ground water, and thus influenced the water chemistry of the mire. Management of the water, including that in the catchment of the mire, should be introduced before biological buffering capacity against excess nutrient loading caused by human activity is exceeded and the mire loses its ombrotrophic status.
Title: Effects of nutrient loadings from catchments on Asajino mire, a small coastal ombrotrophic mire in northernmost Japan
Description:
The relationship between water chemistry and vegetation was studied in a coastal ombrotrophic mire in northern Hokkaido, Japan.
The distributions of
Sphagnum
and
Phragmites
communities were separated clearly by the pH and ion concentration of the peat surface‐pore water.
The drainage ditches along the road across the center of the mire had a high pH and ion concentration, as did the peat water in the western part of the mire.
It was found that fields used for livestock farming on a hill to the west of the mire leached materials into the mire through drainage ditches, surface runoff, and probably also through ground water, and thus influenced the water chemistry of the mire.
Management of the water, including that in the catchment of the mire, should be introduced before biological buffering capacity against excess nutrient loading caused by human activity is exceeded and the mire loses its ombrotrophic status.
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