Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Shallow drainage of agricultural peatlands without land-use change: have your peat and eat it too

Tom Heuts, Quint van Giersbergen, R. Nouta, T. P. A. Nijman, Ralf Aben, O. van der Scheer, P. G. M. Heuts, Louis J. Skovsholt, Gabrielle Rabelo Quadra, Alfons J. P. Smolders, Christian Fritz

Frontiers in Environmental Science · 2024

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Summary

Introduction Drainage for agricultural purposes is one of the main drivers of peatland degradation, leading to significant greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, biodiversity loss, and soil eutrophication. Rewetting is a potential solution to restore peatlands, but it generally requires a land-use shift to paludiculture or nature areas. Methods This study explored whether three different water level management techniques (subsoil irrigation, furrow irrigation, and dynamic ditch water level regulation) could be implemented on dairy grasslands to yield increases in essential ecosystem services (vegetation diversity and soil biogeochemistry) without the need to change the current land use or intensity. We investigated vegetation diversity, soil biogeochemistry, and CO 2 emission reduction in fourtee

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.3389/fenvs.2024.1437394
Catalogue ID
SNmohi6k29-p0h0gg
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