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Advances in Canadian Peatland Hydrology, 2003-2007
Journal article

Advances in Canadian Peatland Hydrology, 2003-2007

Abstract

Peatlands represent over 90% of Canadian wetlands and are the focus of considerable hydrological and biogeochemical research. Research on evapotranspiration (ET) has shown that it can exceed annual precipitation (P) where there are replenishing flood events. Evaporation from open water ponds in boreal peatlands exceeds ET from vegetated riparian zones by about two times, but surrounding forests can shelter small ponds by reducing turbulence. In an open bog, evaporation was modelled by separating the surface into vascular vegetation, hummock moss and hollow moss surfaces, and showed that vascular plants contribute 60-80% of ET, mosses making up the remainder with hummock mosses dominant over hollows. Runoff from peatlands is enhanced by features ranging from headwater swamps, ice-cored peat plateaus, patchy arctic wetlands and even sections of riverine peatlands. Groundwater fluxes can be quite erratic, and depend on transient properties of the peat that depend on moisture content (e.g., unsaturated hydraulic conductivity) to unsteady saturated hydraulic properties (e.g., hydraulic conductivity, specific yield) caused by peat compression and dilation associated with water storage changes. Surface elevation adjustments can result in a more stable depth to water table, increase evaporation losses, increase methane emission, and attenuate pore-water concentration of contaminants. Research on Canadian peatlands has also made significant methodological advances, including measurement of hydraulic properties of living mosses and peat pore-water and pore dimension characteristics. A considerable multi-annual effort has also been made in evaluating carbon dynamics from Canadian peatlands. Summer moisture availability is important to determining carbon fluxes with some peatlands experiencing enhanced productivity following drought (water table drawdown). Sudden changes in water table elevation promote DOC production and export. Methane bubbles confound hydraulic gradients and flows by creating local pockets of pressure, which are then released episodically when the entrapped gas reaches a threshold content. Canadian peatland hydrology continues to be actively researched in lab, field and modelling studies.

Authors

Waddington JM; Quinton WL; Price JS; Lafleur PM

Journal

Canadian Water Resources Journal / Revue canadienne des ressources hydriques, Vol. 34, No. 2, pp. 139–148

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Publication Date

June 1, 2009

DOI

10.4296/cwrj3402139

ISSN

0701-1784

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