Title: FENS David J' Cooper Rodney Chimner Joanna Lemly
1FENSDavid J. Cooper Rodney Chimner Joanna Lemly
2Wetland
- Any ecosystem that has saturated soils for at
least 2 weeks during the growing season of most
years, creates hydric soils, supports hydrophytes - Many different wetland types due to stability of
the water table, water depth, erosive power of
moving water - Riparian
- Marshes
- Wet Meadows
- Salt Marshes and Flats
- Peatlands
3Wetland Types of Interior West
Riparian
Marsh
Salt Flat
Peatland (fen)
Wet Meadow
4PEATLAND
- Production gt decomposition due to water-logging
- Saturated, anaerobic soils, lack free oxygen
limits decomposition rates - Organic matter (roots, rhizomes, mosses, woody
stems) accumulates (20 cm/1000 yrs) and organic
soils form - Peat accumulation create landforms
- Plants are rooted entirely in peat body
- Plants derive all water nutrients from peat
- Isolated from mineral sediment inputs
5Simplified Peatland Carbon Budget
6Two types of peatlands
BOGS
Peatlands
FENS
7BOGS
- Ombrogenous and Ombrotrophic
- Usually raised, but also blanket bogs
- Sphagnum dominated, with low pH (lt4.2)
- Nutrient and mineral ion poor, Ca lt 2.0 mg/L
in water - Typically occur in humid regions with cool
temperatures, but also in drier areas of C.
Canada - Some consider peatlands with pH lt5 to be bogs, gt6
to be fens (Wheeler and Proctor 2000) - No bogs in Rocky Mts of US or Sierra Nevada
8FENS
- Ground water, not precipitation provides main
water source. Minerotrophic - Fen characteristics determined by chemical
content of source waters and water flux - pH varies from lt4 to gt8
- Very sensitive to changes in ground water supply
or flow paths - Vegetation can be conifer forest, shrub, sedge,
or moss dominated
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10Fen Characterization and Identification
- Hydrologic regime
- Soils
- Vegetation
11Ground Water Flow Paths That Sustain Fens
12Water Table near Surface
- Air diffuses 10,000 times slower into saturated
than in unsaturated soils - Soils become isolated from atmospheric gasses
- Oxygen in soil is rapidly used up and anoxic
soils develop and limit organic matter
decomposition - Ground water input keeps soils cooler
- Duration of water table near surface? All summer
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14Ground Water Monitoring Well
15Natural Range of Variation-8 of 11 yearsnear
surface
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17Rain and Water Levels in Fens
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20What is peat or organic soil?30-40 cm thick
21Drepanocladus moss fibers
Sedge roots/rhizomes
Soil colors and fibers indicate organics vs.
color of mineral soils - as well as redox features
22No International Criteria
- For organic matter composition
- For organic carbon composition
- For presence of mineral soil layers
- For type of inorganic matter present
23- Boreal peatlands with little mineral sediment
influx
24Mineral soil influx from mountains
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26Organic Soil Criteria
- Hydrologic Regime
- Saturated with water for gt30d each year
- Composition ( OC that controls soil function
the more clay present the less OC influences
soils) - Must be gt18 organic carbon if gt60 clay
- 12 organic carbon if 0 clay
- 12 (0.1 clay) so if 20 clay need 14 OC
- Horizon Thickness
- 40 cm of organic horizons in top 80 cm of soil
(dominates root zone) - Or, on lithic contact
-
ftp//ftp-fc.sc.egov.usda.gov/NSSC/Soil_Taxonomy/t
ax.pdf
27How determine OC or OM?
- Must be done in lab
- OC can be determined using a CHN analyzer, must
first treat with acid to remove carbonates - OM can be determined by loss on ignition in
muffle furnace, but OM is not all C, and OM
must be converted to OC
28Peat vs. Muck
- Soil taxonomy identifies 3 suborders of histosols
(ist) fibrist, hemist, saprist, based upon the
level of decomposition of the organic matter. - Fibrist soils are considered peat
- Hemist and saprist soils are muck
- HOWEVER, from an ecological perspective any
ecosystem with organic soil is a peatland
29Peat forming vegetation
- Most organic matter in western U.S. fens is
produced by clonal sedges and mosses, - deposited in anaerobic zones below the soil
surface - Litter on surface decomposes
- Woody peat in alder or willow fens, and some
partially forested fens - Carex, Eleocharis, Scirpus are the key vascular
plant genera - Moss peat from Drepanocladus, Sphagnum,
Aulacomnium, Tomenthypnum - California has unusual peat formers Narthecium
(also in Britain), Darlingtonia
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33How old are peatlands?
34Basal Ages of Rocky Mt fens
- Big Meadows 11,180
- Green Mt. Fen 11,650
- East Lost Park 11,200
- Cottongrass Fen 10,300
- Caribou Fen 10,500
- Zapfs Fen 4,800
35Some meadows have small fen area, others are
nearly all fen
Wet Meadow
Fen
Round fen Sequoia NF
36Several plant communities in most fens should
sample each
5
4
3
1
2
37Within fen variation
recharge
4
5
6
Carex limosa
Flow through
7
3
2
discharge
1
38Processes Driving Variation Among Fens and Fen
Vegetation
- Water flow variation, high to low flow rates
influences vegetation production peat accum.
rate - Standing water depth
- Stable pond water level supports floating mats
- Chemistry of source waters due to bedrock
- Climate, including elevation, patterns of
precipitation, supports unique floristic elements - Disturbance processes, including ditches,
livestock grazing etc.
39Four major landform/hydrologic systems support
fens
- Basins
- Slopes
- Spring mounds
- Geological discontinuities
40Limnogenous or Basin fenssurface or ground water
fed
41Basin fens typically have floating mats, but
depending upon rate of succession, basin
infilling may have been completed have
distinctive flora
42Sloping Fens
43Poison Fen Sierra NF
44hillslope fens may support conifer trees
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47Spring moundspecialized type of soligenous fen
with point discharge
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49Geological discontinuity creates hillside flow
systems
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51Chemistry of source waters rich to poor
gradient of Sjörs and DuRietz
52Southern Rocky Mt. Fens Geochemical Classes
Extreme Rich Fens
Transitional Rich to Rich Fens
Iron Fens
53Convict Creek Basin Inyo NFHanging Fen pH
7.87, EC 257 uS, Ca 49 mg/L
54St. Marys Fen Stanislaus NFpH 6.7, high Ca,
HCO3
Rich Fen
55Transitional Fens
Pat-Yore-Flat (Tahoe NF) (Butterfly valley
(Plumas) Narthecium californicum, Darlingtonia,
Rhynchospora alba, Carex echinata, Ledum
glandulosum
pH 6.1, EC 17.8 uS Ca 1.8 mg/L
56Transitional Fen McKinstry Fens - Eldorado NFpH
5.7, EC 28 uS, Ca 2.1 mg/L, Carex echinata,
Drosera rotundifolia, Sphagnum subsecundum
57Poorest fens Dinky Lake Sierra NFSphagnum
fuscum, Kalmia polifolia
pH 5.75, EC 13 uS, Ca 0.3 mg/L, K 1.8 mg/L
58Iron Fens
59Conclusions
- Many fens in most mountain regions
- Large range of fen landforms, hydrologic regimes,
mineral ion and nutrient fluxes, vegetation
types, flora, history during Holocene, land
use/condition - Community types unique to fens, disjunct species
- Many communities are similar throughout North
America and Holarctic (Scirpus pumilus,
Eleocharis pauciflora, Carex aquatilis, C.
utriculata, C. limosa, Meesia triquetra,
Sphagnum subsecundum) - Others more localized Carex illota, Narthecium
californicum, cushion plants in tropical alpine - Many fens impacted by human uses
60Impacts few fens are pristine
- ON SITE IMPACTS
- Filling
- Hydrologic changes drainage ditches
- Snow compaction on ski runs
- Trampling livestock, humans
- Mining, metal and peat
- OFF SITE IMPACTS
- Timber operations
- Hydrologic changes diversions, ground water
pumping - N deposition?
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61Drainage
- Common in agricultural areas
- Particularly wet meadows, marshes, to completely
dry areas out - May be cropped
62Water Diversions/Ditches
What are hydrological and ecological impacts and
how restore?
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64Mason Fen
Rate of flow in open channel compared to ground
water flow through peat/muck
Exotic plant invasion
Plant death
65Dewatering allows pocket gopher and vole invasion
-- proliferates drainage and channel development
Digging exposes peat to oxidation, and digging
undermines plants
66Prospect Basin Fens
Pre-development air photograph
Ski runs
Watersheds
67Snow compaction changed thermal characteristics
of snow from insulation to conducting cold
allowing peat to freeze deeply
68Ground Water Withdrawal
- Daily, seasonal or permanent lowering of water
tables - May stop peat accumulation, and cause peat
oxidation in fens - May cause subsidence
- May dry out wetlands
69Ground Water Pumping
70Trampling from hikersLoss of vegetation and peat
71Livestock Grazing
Eliminates species with rhizomes and favors
taprooted and short-lived species
Hummocks formed in areas without caespitose
species indicate compaction and erosion, and
increase surface area and oxidation
Bare ground facilitates channel development and
head cutting
72RMNP established 1915
Vegetation changes
Fen dry in summer
73Ditch Blockage
74Water Table Changes Relative to Controls
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