THE BOG LANDFORMS OF CONTINENTAL WESTERN CANADA IN RELATION TO CLIMATE AND PERMAFROST PATTERNS

被引:166
作者
VITT, DH
HALSEY, LA
ZOLTAI, SC
机构
[1] UNIV ALBERTA,DEPT BOT,EDMONTON T6G 2E9,ALBERTA,CANADA
[2] ENVIRONM CANADA,CANADIAN FORESTRY SERV,NO FORESTRY CTR,EDMONTON T6H 3S5,ALBERTA,CANADA
关键词
D O I
10.2307/1551870
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
In continental western Canada, discontinuous permafrost is almost always restricted to ombrotrophic peatlands (bogs). Bogs occur mostly as islands or peninsulas in large, often complex fens or are confined to small basins. Permafrost may be present in extensive peat plateaus (or more locally as palsas) and was preceded by a well-developed layer of Sphagnum that served to insulate the peat and lower the pore water temperatures. Air photo interpretation reveals the occurrence of bogs with five types of surface physiography. Concentrated to the south are bogs without internal patterns that have never had permafrost. Dominating the mid-latitudes are bogs with internal lawns and fens with internal lawns (mostly representing former bogs) that had permafrost lenses in the past that have recently degraded. Concentrated in the northwest are peat plateaus without internal lawns or distinct collapse scars, but with permafrost; dominating in the northernmost area are peat plateaus with extensive permafrost and collapse scars. Relationships are apparent between the current - 1-degrees-C isotherm and the southern occurrence of peat plateaus and between the 0-degrees-C isotherm and the southern edge of bogs and fens with internal lawns. We interpret bogs and fens with internal lawns to represent areas where permafrost degradation is currently occurring at a greater rate than aggradation, seemingly in response to warmer regional climate, although fire frequency may also be of local importance.
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页码:1 / 13
页数:13
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