Using the Tea Bag Index to characterize decomposition rates in restored peatlands

Peatlands characteristically accumulate organic matter due to low decomposition rates, but peatland disturbance alters local physicochemical conditions often resulting in loss of soil organic matter and emission of CO2. Restoration may reduce peat oxidation, but traditional measurements of decomposi...

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Main Authors: MacDonald, E., Brummell, M.E., Bieniada, A., Elliott, J., Engering, A., Gauthier, T.-L., Saraswati, S., Touchette, S., Turmel-Courchesne, L., Strack, M.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Boreal Environment Research Publishing Board 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10138/578389
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spelling ftunivhelsihelda:oai:helda.helsinki.fi:10138/578389 2024-09-15T18:00:08+00:00 Using the Tea Bag Index to characterize decomposition rates in restored peatlands MacDonald, E. Brummell, M.E. Bieniada, A. Elliott, J. Engering, A. Gauthier, T.-L. Saraswati, S. Touchette, S. Turmel-Courchesne, L. Strack, M. 2024-06-27T13:45:04Z 221-235 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10138/578389 eng eng Boreal Environment Research Publishing Board Boreal Environment Research 1239-6095 1797-2469 23 http://hdl.handle.net/10138/578389 Suomen ympäristökeskus CC BY 4.0 openAccess Artikkeli lehdessä 2024 ftunivhelsihelda 2024-08-21T23:48:04Z Peatlands characteristically accumulate organic matter due to low decomposition rates, but peatland disturbance alters local physicochemical conditions often resulting in loss of soil organic matter and emission of CO2. Restoration may reduce peat oxidation, but traditional measurements of decomposition are time-consuming. The Tea Bag Index (TBI) is a simple, standardized method to measure decomposition rates in soils. We used the TBI to measure decomposition rate at four restored peatland sites across Canada that were used for peat extraction or disturbed by oil extraction (former well-sites), comparing to undisturbed and unrestored sites. We measured environmental conditions including soil temperature, water table position and peat pH from May to August 2016. Litter bags were buried for one year alongside tea bags at one site for a direct comparison of decomposition rates between the methods. There were no significant differences for TBI decay constant (kTBI) between treatments of restored, unrestored or undisturbed sites across the whole data set, but some differences were found among treatments within the same peatland site for sections restored at different times in the past. Soil temperature, pH, and water table were not significantly related to kTBI, but were negatively correlated with the stabilization factor (S). The kTBI and litter bag k were significantly different but positively correlated. The TBI is not easily comparable to traditional litter bags, but is less costly in both time and money, and may be used in conjunction with additional parameters to determine decomposition patterns with potential for use as a metric for evaluating restoration outcomes. Article in Journal/Newspaper Boreal Environment Research HELDA – University of Helsinki Open Repository
institution Open Polar
collection HELDA – University of Helsinki Open Repository
op_collection_id ftunivhelsihelda
language English
description Peatlands characteristically accumulate organic matter due to low decomposition rates, but peatland disturbance alters local physicochemical conditions often resulting in loss of soil organic matter and emission of CO2. Restoration may reduce peat oxidation, but traditional measurements of decomposition are time-consuming. The Tea Bag Index (TBI) is a simple, standardized method to measure decomposition rates in soils. We used the TBI to measure decomposition rate at four restored peatland sites across Canada that were used for peat extraction or disturbed by oil extraction (former well-sites), comparing to undisturbed and unrestored sites. We measured environmental conditions including soil temperature, water table position and peat pH from May to August 2016. Litter bags were buried for one year alongside tea bags at one site for a direct comparison of decomposition rates between the methods. There were no significant differences for TBI decay constant (kTBI) between treatments of restored, unrestored or undisturbed sites across the whole data set, but some differences were found among treatments within the same peatland site for sections restored at different times in the past. Soil temperature, pH, and water table were not significantly related to kTBI, but were negatively correlated with the stabilization factor (S). The kTBI and litter bag k were significantly different but positively correlated. The TBI is not easily comparable to traditional litter bags, but is less costly in both time and money, and may be used in conjunction with additional parameters to determine decomposition patterns with potential for use as a metric for evaluating restoration outcomes.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author MacDonald, E.
Brummell, M.E.
Bieniada, A.
Elliott, J.
Engering, A.
Gauthier, T.-L.
Saraswati, S.
Touchette, S.
Turmel-Courchesne, L.
Strack, M.
spellingShingle MacDonald, E.
Brummell, M.E.
Bieniada, A.
Elliott, J.
Engering, A.
Gauthier, T.-L.
Saraswati, S.
Touchette, S.
Turmel-Courchesne, L.
Strack, M.
Using the Tea Bag Index to characterize decomposition rates in restored peatlands
author_facet MacDonald, E.
Brummell, M.E.
Bieniada, A.
Elliott, J.
Engering, A.
Gauthier, T.-L.
Saraswati, S.
Touchette, S.
Turmel-Courchesne, L.
Strack, M.
author_sort MacDonald, E.
title Using the Tea Bag Index to characterize decomposition rates in restored peatlands
title_short Using the Tea Bag Index to characterize decomposition rates in restored peatlands
title_full Using the Tea Bag Index to characterize decomposition rates in restored peatlands
title_fullStr Using the Tea Bag Index to characterize decomposition rates in restored peatlands
title_full_unstemmed Using the Tea Bag Index to characterize decomposition rates in restored peatlands
title_sort using the tea bag index to characterize decomposition rates in restored peatlands
publisher Boreal Environment Research Publishing Board
publishDate 2024
url http://hdl.handle.net/10138/578389
genre Boreal Environment Research
genre_facet Boreal Environment Research
op_relation Boreal Environment Research
1239-6095
1797-2469
23
http://hdl.handle.net/10138/578389
Suomen ympäristökeskus
op_rights CC BY 4.0
openAccess
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