Publication
Title
Vegetation and hydrology in a spring mire complex in western pomerania, poland
Author
Abstract
The vegetation of one of the largest spring mires in Poland has been studied with special regard to hydrological conditions and stratigraphic development of the mire. Despite its biotic richness the mire is in a slow state of deterioration, initiated by man several hundred years ago. Evidence has been found that drainage occurred in an originally treeless percolating mire (sloping fen), possibly as a result of hydrological changes in a lower lying lake. The development of the springs was probably a reaction to the increased resistance to water flow in the percolating mire, forcing the groundwater to discharge high up at the sand borders. The eroding effect of the spring water courses increased the drainage and, although the springs also provided new habitats for rare moss communities, a considerable eutrophication in the present spring alder wood can be noticed.
Language
English
Source (journal)
Proceedings of the Koninklijke Nederlandse Akademie van Wetenschappen : series C: biological and medical sciences. - Amsterdam, 1951 - 1989
WETENSCHAPPEN-BIOLOGICAL CHEMICAL GEOLOGICAL PHYSICAL AND MEDICAL
SCIENCES
Publication
Amsterdam : North-Holland , 1994
ISSN
0023-3374
Volume/pages
97 :2 (1994) , p. 219-245
ISI
A1994NX78800004
UAntwerpen
Publication type
Subject
External links
Web of Science
Record
Identifier
Creation 07.02.2019
Last edited 26.11.2024
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