Meta‐analysis reveals that enhanced practices accelerate vegetation recovery during peatland restoration

Author:

Allan Jessica M.12ORCID,Guêné‐Nanchen Mélina3ORCID,Rochefort Line3ORCID,Douglas David J. T.4ORCID,Axmacher Jan C.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. UCL Department of Geography University College London London WC1E 6BT U.K.

2. The Tree Council 14 Dock Offices, Surrey Quays Road London SE16 2XU U.K.

3. Peatland Ecology Research Group, Centre for Northern Studies, Plant Sciences Department Université Laval Quebec City G1V 0A6 Canada

4. RSPB Centre for Conservation Science RSPB Scotland 2 Lochside View, Edinburgh Park Edinburgh EH12 9DH U.K.

Abstract

The provision of critical ecosystem services like carbon sequestration by peatlands has been degraded around the globe. Peatland restoration represents an opportunity to tackle the twin global emergencies of climate breakdown and biodiversity decline. Nonetheless, restoration success relies on a sound understanding of recovery trajectories associated with different restoration techniques. Focusing on temperate/boreal Sphagnum‐dominated peatlands, we used a quantitative meta‐analysis of 28 studies representing 275 sites in 11 countries to test for effects of peatland status (intact, restored, and degraded), varying restoration interventions and time since restoration on vegetation as a key indicator of peatland condition and functioning. Enhanced restoration (such as active revegetation) resulted in recovery to predisturbance levels within 30–35 years for Sphagnum mosses, and 20–25 years for many other peatland specialist species, and was the only restoration approach where positive outcomes were seen across all vegetation response variables. The use of standard restoration techniques, such as rewetting, was projected to result in cover of Sphagnum mosses and peatland specialist plants reaching that of intact sites within 45–55 years post‐restoration. Passive restoration (cessation of the degrading activity with no active restoration) generally elicited limited recovery of keystone peatland vegetation (Sphagnum spp.) even after multiple decades. A lack of standardization in monitoring severely constrains the analysis of peatland restoration outcomes. Increased funding for monitoring and reporting outcomes, and improved monitoring consistency, could greatly enhance our understanding of peatland restoration ecology and improve practice.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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