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Element concentrations in mosses and surface waters of western Canadian mires relative to precipitation chemistry and hydrology
Authors:Nils Maimer  Diana G. Horton  Dale H. Vitt
Affiliation:Dept of Ecology, Plant Ecology, Lund Univ, O Vallg 14, S-223 61 Lund, Sweden;Dept of Botany, The Univ of Iowa, Iowa City, IA 52242, USA;Dept of Botany, The Univ of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada T6G 2E9
Abstract:Concentrations of N, P, S, Na, K, Mg, Ca, Mn, Fe, Cu, Cd, Zn, Pb, Al, and AIA (acid insoluble ash) m mosses (three Sphagnum species and Tomenthypnum nitens, all hummock species) from a variety of mires, both ombrotrophic and minerotrophic, in the coastal western and central parts of Canada are considered in relation to surface water pH and concentrations of Na+, K+, Mg2+, Ca2+, Cl, and SO42- Distinct west-east concentration gradients were present for most elements in both mosses and water, but there were correlations between surface water and moss concentrations only for Ca and Mg
On ombrotrophic sites and sites characterized by poor fen vegetation, wet deposition is the main source of elements in the surface water On rich fen sites, additional Ca and Mg from surrounding soils change the elemental proportions We conclude that hydrochemically the limit between poor and rich fen sites is more decisive than between bog and fen The increase in Ca may give brown mosses a competitive advantage over Sphagnum
Moss concentrations of Na and Mg are the only ones decreasing inland The constancy or inland increase of moss elemental concentrations may depend on either an increasing atmospheric supply (e g Pb), differences in moss growth rates (especially N, P, and K) or site conditions related to the water regime (e g Fe and Al)
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