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All About Sphagnum - Súsán
- Bog Moss
Without Sphagnum mosses there would be no
bogs in Ireland. Bogs have a living surface which is made of
a carpet of Sphagnum mosses. This is floating on a thick layer
of partly rotted plant material that is soaking wet. This is
why when you walk across the surface of a bog it feels bouncy.
The carpet of Sphagnum
mosses is not flat. Some Sphagnum mosses grow tightly packed
together to form hummocks or cushions. These can be up to 1m
high on the bog and can be chocolate brown or orange in colour.
Scientists have counted 50,000 Sphagnum plants in a hummock measuring
one square metre. Others form loose mats in colours of pink,
red, copper and yellow. Still others grow as single plants surrounded
by water in bog pools. These ones are bright green.
Plant Life on the Bog
All of the larger plants on the bog are growing on the Sphagnum
moss. Some plants such as the Heathers grow on the hummocks of
Sphagnum and have to avoid loosing water in the summer when the
bog dries out a little. Many-headed Bog Cotton grows in the bog
pools amongst the Sphagnum. Their stems are filled with air channels
which allows the plant to breathe under the water, rather like
snorkling.
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Structure of a Sphagnum
Plant
A single Sphagnum plant is very small but
has an interesting structure. Attached to the stem are two types
of branches - the spreading branches stick out and give the plant
structure. The hanging branches are pressed to the stem and help
to draw up water.
Sphagnum mosses can hold up to 20 times their
own weight in water. Water is trapped between plants in a hummock,
but it is also stored inside the plant itself in special containers
called cells.
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Hidden World
A huge number of tiny microscopic plants and animals live with
Sphagnum mosses. A few drops of water squeezed from wet Sphagnum
contains hundreds of microscopic species such as desmids, diatoms,
algae, cyanobacteria, amoebae, rhizopods, flagellates, ciliates,
rotifers (wheel organisms), worms, nematodes (round worms), flat
worms and heliozoans (sun animals). One scientist counted over
32,000 microscopic animals from a Sphagnum moss growing in a
bog pool!
Animal
Life
The microscopic plant and animal life found in Sphagnum provides
food for all other organisms living in the wet bog. These animals
include pond skaters, dragonflies, damselflies, caddis flies,
mosquitoes, midges, bloodworms, water boatmen, water beetles,
water lice, and frogs. The web of wildlife is very special in
a bogland. |
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Sphagnum Moss and Man
Thanks to campaigns run by IPCC, we are more
aware of the need to protect Sphagnum moss and the bogs it forms.
Sphagnum moss has many uses. In historic times it was used in
bandages to soak up blood. Today people use a lot of Sphagnum
moss in the garden. This is very bad news for the wildlife that
depends on bog moss. If we recycle vegetable waste from the kitchen,
cut grass and autumn leaves from the garden we can make COMPOST.
This is much better for the garden than Sphagnum moss.
The
Life of Sphagnum
Sphagnum mosses grow from spores which are produced in fruiting
bodies called capsules. When the spores are ripe, pressure builds
up in the capsule until its lid is blown off, sending the spores
shooting into the air.
The spores grow into a tiny moss plant. As
the tip or head of the plant grows upwards, the lower parts of
the moss die and become peat. Some Sphagnum plants grow only
a few mm each year. Others grow up to 10cm in a year!
Irish Peatland Conservation Council
Registered Charity Number CHY6829
Copyright © Irish Peatland Conservation Council
2000
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