Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4577715 Journal of Hydrology 2011 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

SummaryPeatland water table depth is an important control on runoff production, plant growth and carbon cycling. Many peatlands have been drained but are now subject to activities that might lead to their restoration including the damming of artificial drains. This paper investigates water table dynamics on intact, drained and restored peatland slopes in a blanket peat in northern England using transects of automated water table recorders. Long-term (18 month), seasonal and short-term (storm event) records are explored. The restored site had drains blocked 6 years prior to monitoring commencing. The spatially-weighted mean water table depths over an 18 month period were −5.8 cm, −8.9 cm and −11.5 cm at the intact, restored and drained sites respectively. Most components of water table behaviour at the restored site, including depth exceedance probability curves, seasonality of water table variability, and water table responses to individual rainfall events were intermediate between that of the drained and intact sites. Responses also depended on location with respect to the drains. The results show that restoration of drained blanket peat is difficult and the water table dynamics may not function in the same way as those in undisturbed blanket peat even many years after management intervention. Further measurement of hydrological processes and water table responses to peatland restoration are required to inform land managers of the hydrological success of those projects.

► We study a drained, restored (6 years prior to monitoring) and intact blanket peatland. ► Water tables are more variable in the order drained > restored > intact. ► Water table dynamics in the restored site were intermediate between drained and intact. ► Water table response is highly dependent on topographic location around drains. ► Recovery from drainage is slow.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth-Surface Processes
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