EGU21-7527
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7527
EGU General Assembly 2021
© Author(s) 2021. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

The resource potential of peat bogs of the European part of Russia (in the case of the Arkhangelsk region)

Svetlana Selyanina1, Valerya Tatarintseva1, Tamara Ponomareva1, Vladimir Skripnichenko2, Elena Daibova3, Marina Kirillova3, and Alexander Orlov1
Svetlana Selyanina et al.
  • 1N.Laverov Federal Center for Integrated Arctic Research of the Ural Branch of RAS, Wetland Ecosystems Laboratory, Arkhangelsk, Russian Federation (gumin@fciarctic.ru)
  • 2Northern (Arctic) Federal University named after M.V. Lomonosov
  • 3Siberian Research Institute of Agriculture and Peat - Branch of the Siberian Federal Research Center of Agrobiotechnology RAS

Currently, the interest in the development of the northern territories in the world increases. This is associated with the involvement of wetlands in the economic turnover, the degree of which reaches 40-50% in certain regions. A quarter of the industrial peat reserves of the European Russia are concentrated in the Arkhangelsk region. Bogs are traditionally used for gathering wild plants, as hunting lands, for obtaining fuel and substrates for agriculture based on peat, and, after draining, as fertile lands. Oligotrophic bogs are the most spread in the European North; therefore they are of the most interest for the assessment of the possibility of use of the peat in the region. In this case, drainage is a mandatory stage. A change in the groundwater level during drainage inevitably affects the structure and properties of the peat; therefore, the resource potential should be assessed using the example of drained but not exploited peatlands typical for the region, as in the case of the Ovechye bog (64°07'N; 41°35'E). The territory was drained in 1962-1965. Drainage ditches were laid at a distance of 100-110m and are well preserved nowadays. The bog was first assessed in 1961 (before drainage), and then (after drainage) in 2017.

The studied bog is composed mainly of high-moor sphagnum peat with underlying glacial clays. The amplitude of changes in the degree of peat decomposition as a result of drainage narrowed significantly (5-60% and 25-61% before and after drainage, respectively), the average value increased from 30% to 40%. Natural moisture content decreased from 73.3-95.6% to 60.1-74.5%. The average ash content slightly increased to 10.8%. The peat is gradually deoxidizing – the pH value changed from 3.4-3.8 to 4.4-5.9. The groundwater level during the summer low water period declines from 0-0.3m to 1.5-2.5m. The mass fraction of organic carbon is 42.2±8.5%, ammonia nitrogen – 70.1±14.2mg/100g, nitrate nitrogen – 4.5±0.3mg/100g, available potassium – 11.4±3.2mg/100g, available phosphorus – less than 2%, exchangeable calcium– 0.37±0.05%, exchangeable magnesium – 0.28±0.06%, total exchangeable bases – 27.2mEq/100g, hydrolytic acidity – 160.7±21.3mmol H/100g. Thus, the agrochemical properties of the studied peat are extremely low. Its use in agriculture requires the introduction of significant amounts of neutralizing (deoxidizing) compounds and enrichment with biogenic elements. The development of paludiculture seems to be more promising.

The bituminous content (more than 3%) and the content of humic substances at the level of 47-54% are consistent with the increase in the degree of decomposition of peat as a result of drainage. This indicates the possibility of advanced processing of peat with the production of humic preparations and biologically active products from its bituminous part.

It should also be noted that the cellular structure of plant residues is well preserved throughout the depth of the deposit. This provides a low apparent density of the peat (65-225kg/m3) and its high sorption capacity (for example, for kerosene 4-10g/g). Therefore, obtaining sorbents seems to be the most promising direction for using peat in the region.

 

This work was supported by the RFBR grant No. 18-05-70087.

How to cite: Selyanina, S., Tatarintseva, V., Ponomareva, T., Skripnichenko, V., Daibova, E., Kirillova, M., and Orlov, A.: The resource potential of peat bogs of the European part of Russia (in the case of the Arkhangelsk region), EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-7527, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-7527, 2021.