The scholars analysed the diversity of vegetation, breeding birds and arthropods at six rewetted peatland sites dominated by sedge or bulrushes. In Mecklenburg-Vorpommern in northeast Germany, the researchers analysed areas that were either unharvested, or farmed at low or high-intensity. It was found that the cultivated sites had a high plant diversity as well as some rare and endangered arthropods and breeding birds. This means that they can provide valuable habitats for species, even if productive cultivation of the land continues and these areas no longer reflect the historical state of peatlands.
A large proportion of the fens have lost some of their biodiversity due to drainage for intensive land use. Degradation and eutrophication were frequent consequences. This led to a loss of biodiversity that didn’t even recover when farmers stopped using such sites. This makes the recovery of biodiversity on land that is managed with sustainable wet agriculture (paludiculture) all the more positive. The scientists from the Institute of Zoology and the Institute of Botany and Landscape Ecology at the University of Greifswald found a total of 78 plant species, 18 breeding bird species, 55 ground beetle species and 73 spider species. 32 of these species are on the Rote Liste (list of endangered species), such as the pond money spider, the meadow pipit and the sandpiper. Trees and shrubs that cover peatland areas with bushes and hinder the development of typical peatland species were hardly found in the surveyed areas.
The study is part of the PRINCESS project, funded by the European BiodivERsA programme and published in English under the title "Paludiculture can support biodiversity conservation in rewetted fen peatlands" (DOI 10.1038/s41598-023-44481-0).
Further Information
To the article Paludiculture can support biodiversity conservation in rewetted fen peatlands (nature.com)
PRINCESS – Moorwissen.de
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Contacts at the University of Greifswald
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Chair of Experimental Plant Ecology
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Tel.: +49 3834 420 4131
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PD Dr. Franziska Tanneberger
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Zoological Institute and Museum
Prof. Dr. Peter Michalik
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