Lecture 7- Peatland Disturbances Flashcards

1
Q

What is a disturbance?

A

Discrete event that alters ecosystem composition, structure, function or physical environment

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2
Q

What is a disturbance regime?

A

Temporal and spatial patterns of disturbances, characterized by frequency, extent and severity of disturbances

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3
Q

What is resistance?

A

Ability of an ecosystem to withstand a disturbance (stays in the cup even with disturbances)

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4
Q

What is resilience?

A

Ability of an ecosystem to recover structure and function after disturbances (hydrology could have been completely changed, loses resistance and turns into a different ecosystem)

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5
Q

What are some natural disturbances in peatlands?

A

-Fire (lightning strikes)
-Insect outbreaks and pathogens
-Weather
-Permafrost

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6
Q

What are some anthropogenic disturbances in peatlands?

A

-Fire (human ignited)
-Drainage
-Forestry
-Oil and gas development

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7
Q

What influences the fire severity of peatlands?

A

-Tree mortality
-Peat consumption
-Carbon release

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8
Q

What influences resistance and resilience of peatlands?

A

-Species composition (fuel type)
-Microtopography
-Sphagnum dominance
-Surface wetness
-Peat moisture
-Time since last disturbance

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9
Q

What are the three fire severities in increasing order?

A

1.Surface fires
2.Stand-replacing fires
3.Peat fires

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10
Q

What are surface fires?

A

-Lower severity and intensity
-Annual to decadal frequencies
-Promote microtopography and sphagnum development (sometimes can regenerate really well with sphagnum)

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11
Q

What are stand-replacing fires?

A

-Fundamental process in northern peatlands
-All or majority of forest canopy burns (burn so fast that it doesn’t burn the peat)
-Decadal to centennial frequency

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12
Q

What are peat fires?

A

-Highest severity and intensity
-Can burn for months underground (zombie fires)
-Burn 40cm to 1m below
-Most detrimental
-How high is the fire or how fast

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13
Q

What do roads do to peatlands?

A

Changes flow of ground water and surface to and from peatlands which leads to modification of species composition and cover especially in road ditches

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14
Q

Describe metal and mineral mining

A

-Removal of peat and soil to access resources
-Increases water table when peat and soil are removed
-Leach contaminants during and after extraction
-Contaminants can persist for centuries

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15
Q

Describe peat harvesting

A

-Vegetation removed, peatlands drained, dried, then peat is harvested
-Peat exported and sold for horticultural purposes
-Completely destroy environment when you do that
-100s to 1000s of years to restore accumulated peat

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16
Q

What is the most common trees harvested in peatlands?

A

-Tamarack
-Black spruce

17
Q

What happens to the water table when the trees are cut down?

A

The water table rises

18
Q

What are implications of forestry in peatlands?

A

-Low tree productivity
-Results in higher water table
-Modify hydrology in adjacent peatlands and wetlands
-Increased soil compaction minimized by harvesting when ground in frozen
-Can regenerate in 10-20 years

19
Q

What are some direct and indirect disturbances of oil and gas development?

A

-Removal of vegetation
-Removal and compaction of soil
-Altered hydrology
-Contamination
-Emissions
-Reduced resistance and resilience

20
Q

What is open surface mining?

A

-Bitumen is close enough to surface can remove all vegetation and soil to mine
-Removal of entire peatland ecosystem and function

21
Q

What happens to the peatland in open surface mining?

A

Increases salinity, gets into soil, salt water kills the plants

22
Q

What is in situ mining?

A

Force deep underground bitumen deposits to surface

23
Q

What does in situ mining do to the peatlands?

A

-Fragmentation and loss of contiguous peatlands
-Simplify microtopography
-Soil and hydrological changes
-Removal of overstory trees
-Loss of bryophyte species with shifts to graminoids and shrubs

24
Q

What is reclamation?

A

Process of making severely degraded land suitable for another use (plant whatever as long as it fills ecological niche)

25
Q

Describe the process of reclamation of oil sites

A

-Remove contaminated mineral soil
-Restore hydrology
-Transfer new mineral soil or transplant peat
-Mounding and planting in areas where peat loss not significant
-Plant typical species or introduce salt tolerant species

26
Q

What is restoration?

A

Process of assisting recovery in degraded, damaged or destroyed ecosystem

27
Q

Restoration prioritizes _______

A

Composition and structure (microtopography, hydrology, overstory understory and ground layer)

28
Q

Describe the process of reclamation for seismic lines

A

-Access degree of natural regeneration on seismic lines, if naturally regenerating do not treat
-Create microtopography to support tree survival and growth
-Tree planting
-Minimize impacts to soil and grounds layer by completing in winter

29
Q

What is recovery?

A

Compositional, structural and functional return to reference ecosystems

30
Q

True or False? Restoration leads to recovery?

A

False, doesn’t always lead to recovery

31
Q

Disturbance interactions coupled with climate change causes _____ rather than _______

A

-Shifts
-Recovery

32
Q

How long does it take peatlands to recover?

A

Decades to 1000+ years