Litcius/Paper detail

Restoration of forestry-drained boreal peatland ecosystems can effectively stop and reverse ecosystem degradation

Merja Elo, Santtu Kareksela, Otso Ovaskainen, Nerea Abrego, Jenni Niku, Sara Taskinen, Kaisu Aapala, Janne S. Kotiaho

2024Communications Earth & Environment24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Ecosystem restoration will increase following the ambitious international targets, which calls for a rigorous evaluation of restoration effectiveness. Here, we present results from a long-term before-after control-impact experiment on the restoration of forestry-drained boreal peatland ecosystems. Our data comprise 151 sites, representing six ecosystem types. Species-level vegetation sampling has been conducted before, two, five, and ten years after restoration. With joint species distribution modelling, we show that, on average, not restoring leads to further degradation, but restoration stops and reverses this trend. The variation in restoration outcomes largely arises from ecosystem types: restoration of nutrient-poor ecosystems has a higher probability of failure. Yet, the ten-year study period is insufficient to capture the restoration effects in slow-recovering ecosystems. Altogether, restoration can effectively halt the biodiversity loss of degraded ecosystems, although ecosystem attributes affect the outcome. This variability in outcomes underlies the need for evidence-based prioritization of restoration efforts across ecosystems. Restoration halts and reverses degradation of boreal peatlands in nutrient-rich ecosystems, though the impact may be weak in nutrient-poor ones, according to a long-term experiment in Finland comprising 151 sites and 6 ecosystem types

Topics & Concepts

EcosystemEnvironmental scienceRestoration ecologyBorealPeatBiodiversityVegetation (pathology)Ecosystem servicesNovel ecosystemChronosequenceEcologyBiologyPathologyMedicinePeatlands and Wetlands EcologyCoastal wetland ecosystem dynamicsForest Ecology and Biodiversity Studies