Decomposition rate of peat-forming plants in the oligotrophic peatland at the first stages of destruction

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Abstract

The research presents quantitative estimates of the decomposition rate of plant residues at the initial stages of the decay of two plant species (Eriophorum vaginatum and Sphagnum fuscum) in a peat deposit of the oligotrophic bog in the southern taiga subzone of Western Siberia. We also studied a change in the content of total carbon and nitrogen in plant residues and the activity of microflora in the initial stages of decomposition. At the initial stage of the transformation process of peat-forming plants the losses of mass of Sph. fuscum is 2.5 times lower then E. vaginatum. The most active mass losses, as well as a decrease in the total carbon content, is observed after four months of the experiment. The most active carbon removal is characteristic for E. vaginatum. During the decomposition of plant residues, the nitrogen content decreases, and the most intense nitrogen losses were characteristic for Sph. fuscum. The microorganisms assimilating organic and mineral nitrogen are more active in August, the oligotrophic and cellulolytic microorganisms-in July.

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Nikonova, L. G., Golovatskaya, E. A., & Terechshenko, N. N. (2018). Decomposition rate of peat-forming plants in the oligotrophic peatland at the first stages of destruction. In IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science (Vol. 138). Institute of Physics Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1088/1755-1315/138/1/012013

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